SPORTS MEDICINE. Heightened medical checks are being carried out on the Swedish squad during the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. There are now two doctors and three physiotherapists per match. One of the team’s doctors during the tournament is Mats Börjesson, a professor at the University of Gothenburg.
“This is my eleventh major tournament – European Championship, World Cup or Olympics – with the women’s national team,” he says. “We are also present during the season, at training sessions before and during international matches, and in between team gatherings we maintain regular contact with the players and their club teams around Europe and Sweden.”
Mats Börjesson is a Professor in Cardiology at the University of Gothenburg’s Sahlgrenska Academy and cardiologist at Sahlgrenska University Hospital (Östra). As well as his role with the women’s national team, he is also the team doctor for Gothenburg’s Gais football club and works for the world football organization FIFA.
Two other national team doctors – orthopedist Houman Ebrahimi and GP Sadesh Balasingam – are also involved in the current World Cup tournament. Each match is attended by two team doctors (compared to one previously) and three physiotherapists (previously two).
More camera angles than TV viewers see
“We’ve continued to increase staffing since the European Championship in England last year,” continues Mats. “There are many more issues to deal with these days, including infection control, media issues, and so on. We also have a completely different surveillance system now, which enables us to monitor the players in real time from different camera angles which aren’t shown on TV. When one of us runs on to deal with an injury, the other can watch replays and zoom in on the injury to get a clearer picture of what has happened. Information can be relayed to the colleague on the pitch, attending the player, increasing the speed and accuracy of diagnosis, not least in head traumas.