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Damien Delaney Never Read Strange Hospital Gift From Roy Keane

Damien Delaney Never Read Strange Hospital Gift From Roy Keane
Balls Team
By Balls Team
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During the 2010 pre-season at Ipswich, Damien Delaney suffered a freak injury which could have finished his career a decade prematurely.

The Corkman collided with Grant Leadbitter in training. It caused a blood clot to develop in his leg.

Roy Keane was Ipswich Town manager at the time and he visited his player in hospital just after he underwent the first of two surgeries to repair his leg.

Speaking on the Second Captains podcast, Delaney revealed that Keane brought him a curious gift.

"The surgeon said, 'Listen, there's still so much swelling that we couldn't close it up'," said Delaney.

"I've got this zipper belt scar from my hip to my knee. I had 100 staples put in at the backend of it.

"I'm lying in hospital on all these plastic sheets. Roy comes to see me - he's probably the last person I wanted to come in. He sits down and I'm looking at him going, 'Ah, Jesus' but he was fine - he can be very personable and amiable.

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"He gave me a book. It was George Hook's autobiography! I didn't even know who George Hook was. I had to Google him!

"He stayed for a period of time. It was the first time, I'd say, that we'd had a chat. He handed me the book and he was gone.

"I'd say he was probably walking out of the house and had a spare book lying on the bookshelf, picked it up and went 'I'd better bring him something'."

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Delaney did not read the book.

Delaney was 28 at the time of the injury. Through strenuous rehab, he managed to return to action in late 2010.

"It was a ball in the air; I was coming out from centre-back and he was coming back from central midfield," he said recalling the moment of the injury.

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"I didn't see him and he didn't see me. His knee just clattered right into my thigh. It was right at the end of training and there was only a couple of minutes left. I hobbled through the last minutes of the training session.

"I went into the physio room and did the usual thing, thinking I had a dead leg. I went and got a bag of ice, a roll of clingfilm and went to sit in the gym. After a couple of minutes, it didn't feel like a dead leg. It was getting worse and worse.

"Eventually, I ended up getting sick and vomiting into a bin in the gym. I took off the ice pack and saw the amount of swelling that was there. I kept empty retching and vomiting which is not a great sign when you're injured. It got to the point where the physio put me in his car and took me straight to A&E. They got surgeons to come in.

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"I was called compartment syndrome. I got a blood clot and these little compartments fill up with blood. It's a pretty serious thing. Christian Ziege had it when he was at Spurs and it finished him off. The amount of swelling that goes in there, it cuts off the circulation to your leg. If it's left unchecked for a number of hours, it is career threatening. If you left it for long enough, you could lose your leg."

Picture credits: Sportsfile

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See Also: 'Chris Kamara Said On Live TV That I Was The Next Roy Keane'

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