Rice managing neural pain for six months
Declan Rice has revealed he has been managing nerve pain in his hamstring since Christmas, as he reflected on the 'obscene' number of matches he has played this season. The England and Arsenal midfielder sparked concern when he was substituted in the 72nd minute of the 4-2 World Cup win over Croatia last Wednesday. The problem relates to his upper hamstring, with pain radiating into his lower back. However, Rice described his substitution as 'smart' and confirmed he would be fit for England's second group game against Ghana in Boston on Tuesday.
'I was feeling a little bit of neural pain in my hamstring, which I was managing from after Christmas with Arsenal for a very long time,' Rice told ITV Sport. 'Obviously, not a lot of people would have known that. It was all behind-the-scenes stuff but it was a smart decision.' He added: 'In the end, that last 20 minutes is probably where you pick up the most, and it's where you play a 70-minute match. But that last 20 is where you really feel your body going for it. And I think it was a smart decision because the last few days I felt really, really good.'
63 matches this season: 'an obscene amount of games'
Rice has played 63 matches this season — 55 for Arsenal and eight for England. His club reached the finals of the Champions League and Carabao Cup, losing to Paris Saint-Germain and Manchester City respectively, but won the Premier League. 'It's an obscene amount of games,' Rice said. 'The schedule was crazy but what can we do about it? You can't sit and complain. We have to just get on with it for the moments like I had in the Premier League, winning that Premier League. You know you'd play as many games as possible to have that feeling again and knowing that there's a World Cup at the end of it as well. You know you'd put your body on the line to be always in to play. It's a lot of games but we'll get our break at the end.'
Heat acclimatisation and Tuchel's confidence
England began a hot-weather acclimatisation camp in Florida at the start of June, aware that heat and humidity in North America are major challenges. The Croatia game was played in Dallas's domed, air-conditioned stadium at 22°C. Similar conditions are forecast for Boston's open-air stadium for the 4pm local kick-off (9pm BST). Rice said manager Thomas Tuchel has reassured the squad they have the conditioning to cope. 'The heat's going to dictate [our playing style] in spells but the manager's been really clear with us and with this squad that we have the strength and power to outrun and outplay teams with our strength,' Rice said.
Bukayo Saka's achilles issue managed carefully
Rice also discussed the fitness concerns surrounding Bukayo Saka, his Arsenal and England teammate. Saka has been managing an achilles problem for some time and was only fit enough to play as a 72nd-minute substitute against Croatia, where he set up the fourth goal for Marcus Rashford. Saka followed an individual training programme on Saturday and is not expected to start against Ghana. Noni Madueke is likely to continue on the right wing. 'Bukayo will impact this tournament,' Rice said. 'It's really good the way we're managing him. I think the amount of football he's played – I've seen him at Arsenal – this little achilles problem he's got. I think we're managing him the right way, for sure.' He added: 'I don't think you want to put him in straight away and put him at risk. We need to keep building him in. He's been training really well. He came on and had an amazing impact the other night. He's one of the biggest game players I've played with and he wants to play every game. But here he's being smart. And we also have Noni who, for me, has been unbelievable.'
William Saliba also playing through pain
France centre-half William Saliba, another Arsenal player, has also pushed himself through pain this season. 'I've had some minor niggles for several months,' he said ahead of Monday's game against Iraq. 'I've been gritting my teeth because there was the Champions League and the Premier League. But the coaching staff are handling it very well. The World Cup comes round only once every four years so you've got to grit your teeth. I'm not at 100% but there are plenty of players who aren't at 100% either – you can't make excuses.'



