Cristian Erisken has signed for Premier League side Brentford. | PHOTO: Getty Images |
New Brentford signing Christian Eriksen is feeling in a “very good place” as he nears his return to competitive football after his cardiac arrest at Euro 2020.
The 29-year-old Denmark international midfielder has not played since the incident during his nation’s 1-0 loss to Finland on June 12 in Copenhagen Denmark.
Brentford signed Eriksen in January on a deal until the end of the season following his release from Inter in December, where he was ineligible for professional football in Italy after being fitted with an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) device, which the Italian football authorities do not accept.
Christian Eriksen has been unveiled as a Brentford player and is ready to make his debut. | PHOTO: Brentford Football Club |
Eriksen had been training with his former club Ajax and has now linked up with his new Brentford teammates although it is unclear when he will debut with manager Thomas Frank stating it will take a “few weeks”.
“Condition-wise and strength-wise I am in a very good place, it’s just the football touch that needs to come back and get up to speed,” Eriksen told the Brentford website. “We’ll see how my body reacts but I feel very good.”
Eriksen also stated that it is the longest he has been without playing football – by far. The attacking midfielder further stated that he has been lucky that he hadn’t had any injuries really. To be without football for six or seven months is a very long time according to the former Tottenham man.
“It’s been very difficult. You have to let it heal and not do anything and then I started the rehab programme. Then I touched a ball and I’m on a football pitch, smelling the grass, football boots, then everything starts coming back. The excitement to be in the stadium and be with the team.”
Eriksen also said he initially thought he would never play football again after the incident at Euro 2020 but was convinced by doctors otherwise two days later.
Brentford and Denmark player Christian Eriksen. | PHOTO: Getty Images |
“On the way to the hospital I told [wife] Sabrina I may as well leave my boots here,” Eriksen said. “It changed two days later. It was in the moment. I recognised what happened to me later on that night and the next few days.
Several tests were done on the midfielder including tests after training to certain that there are no effects on his heart when playing football.
“Then after that, it slowly took off in a way that if I can do tests with a doctor along the way then I can slowly get back to playing football. There were a lot of tests to see how the heart reacted to physical training again and luckily nothing came out of that and everything was good.
“Then, every month I could push it and then I could play. But the thing was hearing from the doctors that even with an ICD there are no limits, it just depends on the diagnosis and how you feel about it.”
Brentford who are playing their first-ever Premier League football are currently sitting 14th in the Premier League table, with 23 points after 23 rounds of matches and Eriksen might be a big boost to their attack.
Nathan Sialah is a journalist by profession with interest in politics, sports, cryptocurrency and human interests with 5 years experience in Radio and Digital Journalism. This has helped Sialah develop a responsible approach to any task he undertakes or any situation that he is presented with.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login