Physio Admits He Feared for Flintoff Future
The physio who helped Andrew Flintoff back to fitness has admitted that he wasn't sure whether the all-rounder would fully recover
Dave Roberts, the Lancashire physio who shepherded Andrew Flintoff back to full fitness, admitted for the first time yesterday that he wondered whether the England all-rounder would ever recapture his old swagger following the fourth and most recent operation on his left ankle in Amsterdam last October.
Roberts was oozing pride after Flintoff's hair-raising spell to Jacques Kallis on Thursday evening, a passage of play the physio described as "the culmination of all the hard work we've put in over the last few years". But his pleasure was tinged with anxious memories as he recalled his own uncertainty of 10 months ago. "I've never said this to anyone before but after that last operation I did think, 'Will he ever be the same again?' I could never share that with Fred because you have to be upbeat. So to see him come in the other night was fantastic and a massive relief."
Roberts has been Flintoff's physical - and at times mental - guru ever since he underwent his first ankle operation in 2005, although the latest period of rehab began with the less than fearsome sight of Roberts pushing his patient out of Schipol airport in a wheelchair last autumn. But optimism grew when the Dutch ankle specialist Professor Niek van Dijk removed a tiny piece of bone fragment from the troublesome joint, after which it was a case of nursing Flintoff back to health.
"Part of the problem was the muscle wasting that went on, so we had to build him up all over again," said Roberts. "It was really important to get a full six months with him this time rather than just three, but it was still quite a journey. After the operation we went to Florida for eight weeks before Christmas, where he still couldn't run. That meant a lot of spinning, weights, cross-training and reshaping his body to get more definition in his lower limbs.
"By the time we got to Cape Town, where we spent 10 days in January, he was running again but we had to gradually reintegrate him. It was also a question of mentally moving him away from being my patient to being a cricketer. The Lions tour to India in February helped that process, as did Lancashire's pre-season trip to Dubai. Thursday evening was a moment of huge pride for me but I've had great support from the ECB, especially Hugh Morris [the England team's managing director]."
Roberts described the side strain that ruled Flintoff out for six weeks earlier in the summer as "a nightmare" but believes the setback added to his desire to return. "In some ways it got him hungrier and he trained harder again," he said. "I'm very proud of the fact that he can now bowl like that but I'll be happier once he's got through a full series and had no reaction. I am optimistic. He's fitter and stronger than ever. If he keeps fit, keeps doing his rehab and prehab and looks after the ankle, he can be around for a long time."
Roberts was oozing pride after Flintoff's hair-raising spell to Jacques Kallis on Thursday evening, a passage of play the physio described as "the culmination of all the hard work we've put in over the last few years". But his pleasure was tinged with anxious memories as he recalled his own uncertainty of 10 months ago. "I've never said this to anyone before but after that last operation I did think, 'Will he ever be the same again?' I could never share that with Fred because you have to be upbeat. So to see him come in the other night was fantastic and a massive relief."
Roberts has been Flintoff's physical - and at times mental - guru ever since he underwent his first ankle operation in 2005, although the latest period of rehab began with the less than fearsome sight of Roberts pushing his patient out of Schipol airport in a wheelchair last autumn. But optimism grew when the Dutch ankle specialist Professor Niek van Dijk removed a tiny piece of bone fragment from the troublesome joint, after which it was a case of nursing Flintoff back to health.
"Part of the problem was the muscle wasting that went on, so we had to build him up all over again," said Roberts. "It was really important to get a full six months with him this time rather than just three, but it was still quite a journey. After the operation we went to Florida for eight weeks before Christmas, where he still couldn't run. That meant a lot of spinning, weights, cross-training and reshaping his body to get more definition in his lower limbs.
"By the time we got to Cape Town, where we spent 10 days in January, he was running again but we had to gradually reintegrate him. It was also a question of mentally moving him away from being my patient to being a cricketer. The Lions tour to India in February helped that process, as did Lancashire's pre-season trip to Dubai. Thursday evening was a moment of huge pride for me but I've had great support from the ECB, especially Hugh Morris [the England team's managing director]."
Roberts described the side strain that ruled Flintoff out for six weeks earlier in the summer as "a nightmare" but believes the setback added to his desire to return. "In some ways it got him hungrier and he trained harder again," he said. "I'm very proud of the fact that he can now bowl like that but I'll be happier once he's got through a full series and had no reaction. I am optimistic. He's fitter and stronger than ever. If he keeps fit, keeps doing his rehab and prehab and looks after the ankle, he can be around for a long time."

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- Cricket: England Allrounder Andrew Flintoff to Undergo Ankle Operation
- Strong-arm Flintoff Shines As Gloom Sets in for Kallis and Co
- Flintoff Comes in From the Dark With a Roar of Full Recovery
- This Was Test Cricket at Its Compulsive Best, Says Kallis
- England Rise Again on the Back of Their Colossus
- Flintoff Brings Relief As Bowlers Feel the Pressure
- Flintoff Back But Headingley Factor Leaves Selectors in a Muddle
- England v South Africa - Live!
- Flintoff's Return Leaves England Still Looking at Sixes and Sevens
- Flintoff Replaces Collingwood for England's Second Test Against South Africa
- Flintoff Bursting to Get Back in the Fray and Prove the Best is Yet to Come
- I Can Be Better Than Ever, Says Flintoff
- Moores Throws a Smoke Screen Over Final Selection
- Match-winner Flintoff Promises More From His Bat
- Flintoff and His X-factor Set for Test Comeback at Headingley
- Flintoff Named in England Squad for Second Test
- Stumps Go Flying As Fiery Flintoff Shows England What They've Been Missing
- Who Makes Way As Bowlers' Toil Leaves Return of Flintoff Inevitable?
- Flintoff Serves Notice of Intent With Hostile Spell As Hampshire Stutter
- Flintoff Enjoys Indoor Net and Leaves Six Men Pondering Their Futures



