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Flintoff pins
hopes on steroid injection
Lord's—Andrew Flintoff has had a steroid injection in his left ankle in
a bid to play in the deciding one-day international against India at
Lord's and be available for the ICC World Twenty20.
Flintoff has missed three matches in the current series, one with
swelling behind his right knee and two after jarring his ankle during
the fourth game at Old Trafford. He had a lengthy bat in the nets at
Lord's and bowled under the watchful eyes of Peter Moores and the
England medical team.
"There is no pain reaction as of now," said Moores, "but we have to wait
until the morning. It is very difficult to identify what it [the
problem] is. We will look into that and hopefully we can rein it in and
make him ready for the longer term. We don't know when the pain is going
to come back or not.
"At the moment the medical team is assessing him and he is already
wearing a special boot that will help him. We have to try and make sure
that it settles down and the injection will help for that. He batted and
bowled today, and now we have to wait for the ECB medical team's word on
whether we can play him tomorrow."
It is the first steroid injection Flintoff has had since the Melbourne
Test last winter and he has previously said how he doesn't want to rely
on them because of the long-term effects on his body. However, Moores is
confident that the latest jab is the best way to get Flintoff back onto
the field.
"The injection is to take the pain away and get that inflammation down,
and it is the first stage. It is a way of injury management. They [the
medical team] were very conscious with the injection and it wasn't into
the joints. I am not a medical man, but they said the risk with the
injection is minimal and we can go ahead with it."—Agencies |