Rosicky, Cech boost Czechs after scans
Czech players Tomas Rosicky and Petr Cech have good chances of being fit for their side’s final Euro 2012 Group A clash against co-hosts Poland after undergoing scans on Wednesday. Both players - two of the few remaining players still in the squad from...
Czech players Tomas Rosicky and Petr Cech have good chances of being fit for their side’s final Euro 2012 Group A clash against co-hosts Poland after undergoing scans on Wednesday.
Both players - two of the few remaining players still in the squad from the flair-filled Czech side that reached the Euro 2004 semi-finals - would be huge losses to the Czechs were they unable to play.
“We could see them both play (against Poland on Saturday) in the end. There’s a big chance,” chief team doctor Petr Krejci was quoted as saying after the scans.
There had been serious concern over the injury-prone Rosicky, who was unable to come back out for the second half of the crucial 2-1 win over Greece on Tuesday because of a sore Achilles tendon.
The scan, though, showed no damage to either the tendon or the tissue according to Krejci.
But the Arsenal midfielder himself was not so upbeat.
“I had a similar injury in the spring. At that time, I skipped practice during the week and then went straight onto the pitch,” he said.
“I’m glad the tendon as such is OK, but it’s still swollen. It has never hurt like this. It even hurts when I walk, I can’t really stand on the leg,” he told the public Czech Television.
“I’m not giving up, we waited for this moment for a long time. And I want to play if possible,” said Rosicky, the Czech team captain.
Chelsea keeper Cech took over the captaincy after Rosicky failed to come back out for the second half against Greece, and finished the game with a sore left shoulder.