Major Collingwood magpie Injury Update:For Opening Round as 7 are seriously injured
|Injury Update: Opening Round
Collingwood’s Head of High-Performance Jarrod Wade has provided an Injury
Update ahead of the Magpies first game of the 2024 Toyota AFL Premiership
Season against the GWS Giants on Saturday.
Collingwood’s Head of High-Performance Jarrod Wade has provided an Injury
Update ahead of the Magpies first game of the 2024 Toyota AFL Premiership
Season against the GWS Giants on Saturday.
The fitness of Collingwood veteran Scott Pendlebury will be assessed before the
Opening Round clash in Sydney as he continues his recovery from a knock to
the back of his knee/hamstring region suffered during pre-season training. The
injury kept him out of last week’s practice match against Richmond.
Fellow veteran Jeremy Howe won’t play in Saturday evening’s match after the calf injury that saw him miss last week’s
practice match. The 233-gamer will continue to build his training loads and
is expected to be available for the Round One clash against the Sydney Swans.
Key forward Nathan Kreuger will be out until at least Round Five after injuring
his hamstring in last week’s VFL practice match against Richmond. The 24-year-old
suffered a semimembranosus injury and is expected to have a quicker recovery
period compared to the more common hamstring injury.
2023 draftee Harry DeMattia is continuing his recovery from a finger injury and has received the all clear to
begin sweating following the risk of infection post-surgery lowering. The 18-
year-old will enter a six-to-eight-week period of running and conditioning, that
will see him develop a range of attributes that will form part of his long term
athletic development, including fitness, speed and agility.
Josh Eyre is progressing well in his recovery from a hamstring injury
sustained in pre-season. The Supplemental Selection Period signing
has been able to complete gym and prep to run work inside and is expected to
begin running next week. Eyre will complete a couple of weeks of slow
tempo running before his speed develops over a four-to-six-week block.
Defender Nathan Murphy continues to build his confidence in his return to play after suffering a concussion during last
year’s Grand Final. Murphy has completed some contact work in a controlled environment at training,
including in a one-on-one setting against a tackle bag. The aim continues to be to
develop this, with no timeframe on return set at this stage.
Key forward Dan McStay is continuing to make positive steps in his recovery from
the ACL injury he suffered in November. The 28-year-old is completing two
running sessions a week, and will continue this for another two weeks,
before he then makes the step to increasing his volume and load to
progress into the next phase of his rehabilitation.