Placenta is not what the doctor ordered for Wenger as boss slams medicine

20 November 2009 16:03
Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger is not a fan of alternative medicine - but accepts whatever makes a player comfortable can only help the healing process.   [LNB]Holland striker Robin van Persie is set for about six weeks on the sidelines after suffering ankle ligament damage during international duty, and travelled to Serbia for a radical new treatment by Dr Maria Kovacevic which involves massage with placenta. [LNB]Such therapy is no longer rare in the modern game, as players seek all they can to help get them back into action sooner rather than later.   [LNB] Pain game: Van Persie picked up his injury on international duty with Holland but was all smiles after seeing Dr Maria Kovacevic in Serbia (below)[LNB]Wenger can understand their reasoning, even if he does not agree with the logic.   [LNB]'I am not a fan, but also I am not a doctor,' the Arsenal manager said. 'I have seen a few bizarre treatments.   [LNB]'I could tell you a few stories, I have enough to write a book on them. But I respect the individual freedom of everybody who wants to be treated how they want to be treated.  [LNB] 'Since I have been in the sport, when I have any guy who is injured, their first reflex is to go to their own country to be treated.  [LNB] [LNB]'When I was in France, the English players want to come back to England, here, the France players want to go back to France.   [LNB]'That is a problem of confidence. Robin is exactly the same - most of the time he is treated first in Holland, because that is where he feels the most comfortable.'[LNB]Wenger added: 'The positive news we had is that originally I was told he could be out for the rest of the season, but it did not need surgery.   [LNB]'Robin will be out for four to six weeks. We count six because we are a bit pessimistic.'[LNB]The loss of van Persie was quickly followed by reports defender Kieran Gibbs had broken his foot while on duty with the England Under 21 team.   [LNB]However that turned out to be no more than superficial damage and he could be back in action for the visit of Chelsea next weekend.   [LNB]Arsenal have at least been boosted by the return of England forward Theo Walcott from a knee problem, while Brazilian midfielder Denilson is also in the squad for Saturday's trip to Sunderland.   [LNB]The free-scoring Gunners had been on an unbeaten 13-match run through all competitions before the international break, which had lifted them up to second in the Barclays Premier League table.   [LNB]Given striker Nicklas Bendtner is still sidelined by a groin problem which needed surgery, Wenger is set to turn to Croatia marksman Eduardo - who earlier in the week agreed a new contract with the Gunners - to lead the line at the Stadium of Light.   [LNB]Traditional: Wenger[LNB]Wenger knows the importance of securing what would be a seventh win from eight in the Premier League.  [LNB] 'We have a game in hand. If we win that, we can be two points behind Chelsea, and we play them next week,' he said. 'But in our job, the most important game is always the next one. The game against Chelsea has more significance if we win tomorrow.'[LNB]Wenger added: 'Sunderland are a team with a lot of dynamic, movement and commitment. That is always very difficult to handle.   [LNB]'It is always a great atmosphere up there and I am highly conscious it will need a great performance from our side to win, but the players are focused.'[LNB] Guilty Henry holds his hands up: France must replay Irish World Cup play-offPlacenta doctor goes to ground after work on Arsenal star Robin van PersieALL THE WEEKEND'S BARCLAYS PREMIER LEAGUE TEAM NEWS Sportsmail's guide to the top 10 worst Frenchmen ever... and there's no HenryWenger comments on controversy - what they said about la Main de Dieu'I almost played for England': Arsenal star came close to joining Three LionsARSENAL FC

Source: Daily_Mail