This is like deja vu all over again. Per one study:
"The positive association between fatigue and injury risk was in accordance with results from research on elite soccer(15) and rugby(12) players. Accumulated minutes and a lack of rest days did not directly cause injuries, and researchers should examine the causal pathways linking fatigue to injuries, particularly given the variability in the estimated effects of these variables. In their investigation of knee injuries, Goitz et al(13) reported that knee-joint proprioception errors were greater during a state of fatigue and specifically suggested that the mechanism for ACL injuries is more likely to occur in fatigued states."
But you should spend more time looking at this, which is a summary article that itself references some other solid studies, including one by MIT. https://fitforfutbol.com/2016/02/th...y-and-sleep-on-performance-injury-likelihood/ Below is an excerpt, since you apparently lacked time to read since the last time I posted it in this forum:
Schedule Density is positively correlated with injuries Schedule density has been linked with greater injuries and decreased quality of play. One study on soccer players found that the closer together games are played without adequate rest, the greater the likelihood for injury. Interestingly, this relationship DOES NOT seem to occur for younger athletes. Likewise, there is data out of the very trustworthy MIT Sloan conference that suggests that back-to-back games and game density do not predict injuries.
Minutes Played in a game are positively correlated with injuries. Injury rates rise proportional to the number of minutes played. Sometimes this one can be convoluted and obscured by the fact that many injuries occur in the first couple minutes are on the court or pitch. This is misleading though because all players who see game action MUST go through the early minutes of playing time before reaching longer durations of play. This same rationale is used to misrepresent the fact that more car accidents occur closer to home. Of course they do! You have to leave home before you can go anywhere else. Once we take this fact in to account though, the evidence clearly indicates that injury likelihoods go up exponentially with minutes played. This has been observed in soccer (1, 2), rugby and basketball.
Your turn Doc. @Simisoccerfan couldn't find a study to refute this, all he could do is call me names, which is one reason I repeatedly mock him. I don't recommend that you continue making his same mistake, although I must say you've gotten off to a bad start calling me a clown when I've already provided some solid support for my position in this forum.
Did you really just offer a single basketball study about back to back games as medical consensus that playing 75 minutes over three straight days of soccer games is healthier than playing 90 minutes over three games in four days? Medical consensus and one study? Those are the same? Come on joker. You ain't fooling anyone. Everyone knows that fatigue leads to increased injury risk. I called you out about your "medical consensus" claim regarding playing three games over three straight days for 75 minutes vs. 90 minutes over four days. Nothing. Nada. Under your logic (or lack thereof), playing 89 minutes over three straight days is healthier than playing three, 90 minute games over four days. Of course, we know that makes no sense and is categorically untrue. So I want the medical consensus that shows 75 minutes over three straight days is healthier. Heck, I'll even settle for a single study on point. I'll be waiting anxiously.