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The original was posted on /r/soccer by /u/Vila-real on 2026-02-16 15:18:04+00:00.


1,000 days after, the Catalan winger refuses to give up

It has been three years since Gerard Deulofeu last stepped on a futbol pitch. The 31-year old, without a club since January 2025, has not given up: daily gym sessions and near-perfect healthy living are some of the Catalan winger’s many efforts to move past knee ligament injury complications which refuse to let go.

Deulofeu (translated to God Made Him in Catalan) spoke to the BBC on his injury: “The most painful thing one can feel” when remembering his injury, now over 1,000 days ago. He recalls not being able to stroll around town with his kids, walk the dog, or drive his car.

“I am hoping for a miracle now and being able to play again, although I know it is very hard to come back with this disability,” he told the British media outlet.

His last match was January 2023; Gerard injured his knee ligament in a match against Napoli, who that year would lift its first Scudetto in decades. Deulofeu limped off as the Maradona Stadium applauded, and even though he spoke to it being “Just a scare” at the time, Gerard did not realize his ACL was “Completely broken” after attempting to play against Sampdoria shortly after.

“I played with a torn ACL without knowing it.”

It had not been the first time his knee gave up; back in 2020 while at Watford, he suffered his first ACL tear. The unique problem was the infection that followed, which meant the ligament kept eating itself away. Eventually, it was bone hitting on bone.

The injury reminds futbol fans of Santi Cazorla’s nightmare, with the Arsenal legend unable to feature for over two years while an infection destroyed his Achilles tendon. Multiple surgeries followed, and the Asturian had to use a skin graft from his arm to be used on his heel.

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Cazorla purposely chose part of his arm tattoo to be used in the site of his injury.

Deulofeu told Sky Sports in 2025 that he missed “Everything. The locker room, the post-match interviews, the matches themselves…I am doing well, I improve every month, but I am taking it slow.”

Slow was not in his mind when his career first started, for him nor his local team Barcelona, taking off overnight and taking the spotlight as one of the most promising wingers of the late 00s in Can Barca. Deulofeu featured for Spain Under 17 in March 2010, having celebrated his 16th birthday a week before. He started for Barcelona B, playing 40 matches in the tough second division of Spain before turning 18, and playing for the first time months later.

By age 19 he was already in England, providing flashes of lightning for Everton with his style of play and ability to leave defenders behind. A hamstring injury left him on the sidelines for two months, but he otherwise completed a notable season, playing 900 minutes, and with three goals and three assists to his name in the Premier League under manager Roberto Martinez.

Although successful stints followed, along with Everton, in Sevilla, back at Barcelona and with Milan, it was at Watford where he found his best version, with 17 goals and 10 assists in 70 matches for The Hornets under yet another Spanish manager, Javi Gracia.

Deulofeu was the first player in the club’s history to score a hat trick in the Premier League and under Javi Gracia’s orders, he faced Manchester City in the FA Cup final. The Citizens stomped the Hertfordshire club 6-0, but the accomplishment remained. Things were looking up, but his first knee injury followed.

Deulofeu never found his footing to get to the level he and the fans watching him expected to reach, but he did reach some heights: he won the Europa League with Sevilla and featured for Spain on a handful of occasions as the third youngest-ever player to be called by Vicente del Bosque to play for the national team, after Bojan Krkic and Iker Muniain.

Three years later, the 2023 injury with Udinese meant his last 15 minutes of professional futbol before the long break. The Italian club kept him on the payroll for another two years.

Perhaps for that reason and the overall support of Le Zebrette’s fanbase, Deulofeu has said that a return to playing would “Have to go through Udine” first and foremost. “Supporting me through this whole thing was so valuable to me. If I ever play again, I have no doubt in my mind that it will be for this club, and for the people who helped me,” he told Sky Sports Italia.

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Three years after that last injury, Deulofeu hopes to come back to the futbol pitch. Some teams like Getafe have shown mild interest in the winger, but the gamble is an obvious one, much like Cazorla’s return to Villarreal in 2018 after training with Alaves’ youth team for weeks. At age 41, Santi continues to feature in La Liga, now with his local team Oviedo as they fight to avoid relegation. Perhaps a sign of things to come for Deulofeu.

In the meantime, the Catalan controls what he can control: he is absolutely obsessed with fitness, studies sport science to find ways to gain an edge on his situation, and hopes to find a way back to the sport he loves.