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Chelsea's Lampard joins flight to Serbia for treatment
CHELSEA midfielder Frank Lampard has flown to Serbia for treatment on the torn thigh muscle he suffered training with England ahead of last weekend's friendly with Brazil, British media reported today.
The Guardian said the 31-year-old Lampard flew to Belgrade on Thursday to see Serbian doctor Marijana Kovacevic, who has treated several players from leading Premier League clubs.
Kovacevic has received widespread publicity in England for using a controversial treatment involving the use of fluids derived from horse placenta to speed up the healing process.
Liverpool's Albert Riera, Yossi Benayoun, Fabio Aurelio and Glen Johnson have also traveled to Serbia for 'special treatment' according to the club website (www.liverpoolfc.tv) as has Arsenal's injured forward Robin van Persie.
Lampard suffered his injury on November 12 and Premier League leaders Chelsea said he would likely be missing for three weeks ruling him out of a crunch London derby at Arsenal on November 29.
British media said Lampard had not been undergoing the placenta treatment with Kovacevic, who specializes in muscle injuries, but had utilized standard massage oils.
Liverpool said midfielders Riera and Benayoun were due to be out for another two weeks with hamstring problems but could now feature against Manchester City at Anfield in today's early kickoff after the much-publicized journey to eastern Europe.
Benitez was so pleased with the treatment he sent defenders Aurelio and Johnson to Serbia as well.
All four players have since returned to Merseyside and have taken part in full training sessions for the past two days.
"You know people have talked about them going to Serbia for special treatment and that's true," Benitez was quoted as saying on the Liverpool Website. "We had a lot of reports of international players going there, so we sent some players.
"They are now training so we will see if they can play. They have trained for the last two days. It has been good.
"There are other names from different teams who have been doing this treatment for seven years. It is a curative program for players with muscle injuries and it works well."
Arsenal's Van Persie has visited Kovacevic for treatment on the ankle ligaments he damaged playing for the Netherlands last Saturday, which the club said would keep him out for six weeks.
Arsenal said on their Website (www.arsenal.com) yesterday that Van Persie's quest for a speedy return led him to Serbia where one procedure will see placenta fluid dripped onto his ankle.
Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger told reporters at a news conference that while he was happy to let Van Persie experiment, he was skeptical of the impact of alternative medicine.
"When you have, for example, a muscle problem, it's 21 days (out)," he said. "I've never seen anybody shorter.
"I have seen so many people sent there (Serbia) and in five days they can play. But they can only play with injections and then they have a recurrence of a muscle injury always.
"You cannot shorten it (the recovery period). The intensity of the treatment can help and sometimes you can speed it up a little but there are some problems. A damaged ankle ligament takes four weeks."
However, the Arsenal manager added that he did not object to placenta treatment on ethical grounds.
"It's not injected," he said. "I leave that responsibility to my medical people. I ask is there any danger to do it, they say no, I say OK let's let him go and that's it."
The Guardian said the 31-year-old Lampard flew to Belgrade on Thursday to see Serbian doctor Marijana Kovacevic, who has treated several players from leading Premier League clubs.
Kovacevic has received widespread publicity in England for using a controversial treatment involving the use of fluids derived from horse placenta to speed up the healing process.
Liverpool's Albert Riera, Yossi Benayoun, Fabio Aurelio and Glen Johnson have also traveled to Serbia for 'special treatment' according to the club website (www.liverpoolfc.tv) as has Arsenal's injured forward Robin van Persie.
Lampard suffered his injury on November 12 and Premier League leaders Chelsea said he would likely be missing for three weeks ruling him out of a crunch London derby at Arsenal on November 29.
British media said Lampard had not been undergoing the placenta treatment with Kovacevic, who specializes in muscle injuries, but had utilized standard massage oils.
Liverpool said midfielders Riera and Benayoun were due to be out for another two weeks with hamstring problems but could now feature against Manchester City at Anfield in today's early kickoff after the much-publicized journey to eastern Europe.
Benitez was so pleased with the treatment he sent defenders Aurelio and Johnson to Serbia as well.
All four players have since returned to Merseyside and have taken part in full training sessions for the past two days.
"You know people have talked about them going to Serbia for special treatment and that's true," Benitez was quoted as saying on the Liverpool Website. "We had a lot of reports of international players going there, so we sent some players.
"They are now training so we will see if they can play. They have trained for the last two days. It has been good.
"There are other names from different teams who have been doing this treatment for seven years. It is a curative program for players with muscle injuries and it works well."
Arsenal's Van Persie has visited Kovacevic for treatment on the ankle ligaments he damaged playing for the Netherlands last Saturday, which the club said would keep him out for six weeks.
Arsenal said on their Website (www.arsenal.com) yesterday that Van Persie's quest for a speedy return led him to Serbia where one procedure will see placenta fluid dripped onto his ankle.
Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger told reporters at a news conference that while he was happy to let Van Persie experiment, he was skeptical of the impact of alternative medicine.
"When you have, for example, a muscle problem, it's 21 days (out)," he said. "I've never seen anybody shorter.
"I have seen so many people sent there (Serbia) and in five days they can play. But they can only play with injections and then they have a recurrence of a muscle injury always.
"You cannot shorten it (the recovery period). The intensity of the treatment can help and sometimes you can speed it up a little but there are some problems. A damaged ankle ligament takes four weeks."
However, the Arsenal manager added that he did not object to placenta treatment on ethical grounds.
"It's not injected," he said. "I leave that responsibility to my medical people. I ask is there any danger to do it, they say no, I say OK let's let him go and that's it."
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