France goalkeeper Steve Mandanda has revealed he is lucky
not to be paralysed, following his horrific clash while playing for Marseille
in May.
Mandanda missed the World Cup after cracking a vertebra
in his neck in a collision with Guingamp's Mustapha Yatabare in a Ligue 1 match
on May 17 but the 29-year-old claimed it could have been even worse.
The Marseille goalkeeper, who made his return to the
pitch in a friendly against Willem II in July, claimed he could have become a
tetraplegic - or quadriplegic - following the accident.
"In the heat of the moment you have no time to ask
yourself questions," Mandanda told France Football.
"I wanted to get up but I sensed it wasn't possible
and I went off on a stretcher.
"When I was on the stretcher the thought went
through my mind: 'Will I recover in time to play at the World Cup?' I didn't
realise how serious the accident was. I could have been tetraplegic and forced
to give up football.
"The neurosurgeon admitted that to me the following
morning having looked at the scans and the MRI. He told me I wouldn't be able
to go to the World Cup but added I'd been lucky amidst the distress. It could
have been much more serious."
Mandanda played 90 minutes on Saturday in his second
match since the accident, helping Marseille to a 3-1 friendly win over Chievo
Verona.
Ahead of his eighth season at the Stade Velodrome,
Mandanda underlined how important it was to move on from the memory of his
final match of last season, effectively pledging his future to Marseille after
being linked with moves to Milan and Arsenal in the close-season.
"Leaving the club and the Stade Velodrome on a
stretcher, injured, after all these years at the club would not have been
great," he said.
"I want to have a good season with [Marseille] and
erase last season as far as possible, as simple as that."
Culled from Soccerway
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