Soccer-Spain must be patient, says Yamal as he continues to manage return from injury


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group H - Spain v Cape Verde - Atlanta Stadium, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. - June 15, 2026 Spain's Lamine Yamal looks dejected after the match IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Jordan Godfree

CHATTANOOGA, Tennessee, June 19 (Reuters) - Spain winger ⁠Lamine Yamal said on Friday he is not yet ready to play a ⁠full match at the World Cup as he continues his carefully managed ‌return from a hamstring injury, though the 18-year-old remains available for limited minutes inSunday's game against Saudi Arabia.

The Barcelona forward played 25 minutes in Spain's lacklustre 0-0 draw with Cape Verde in their opening, his first appearance ​in nearly two months.

Spain face Saudi Arabia on Sunday, with ⁠Yamal's fitness already a central talking ⁠point as the European champions look to ignite a campaign that began with a splutter ⁠rather ‌than a sparkle.

"I'm fine, I'm feeling good, but it's too soon, it's unnecessary; I'm still settling in – it's not the right time to play a full match ⁠yet – but I can play for as many minutes as ​the manager wants," Yamal told ‌Spanish public television TVE.

“I want to be on the pitch; at the end ⁠of the day, ​even if you know you can’t play for 90 minutes, you always want to get out there and help the team.”

Yamal, who helped Spain win a record-extending fourth European Championship title in 2024, said ⁠the injury had inevitably made him think about the ​World Cup.

"All players in the final stages of the season – with every injury, you think about the World Cup, and obviously about your team, but the World Cup is always on ⁠your mind," he said.

"After I've heard about the injury, thank God the doctors told me I was going to be ready, and here we are, happy. I hope I never get injured again."

Spain's draw with Cape Verde prompted criticism, but Yamal said the reaction should not ​become a drama.

"It's best to move on," he said. "There was ⁠a bit of a fuss over a draw, but in the end lots of teams have ​struggled in the first round – it doesn't mean anything.

"Obviously, ‌we have to win on Sunday because we're ​among the favourites, but just because you've drawn doesn't mean you're one of the worst teams in the World Cup."

(Reporting by Fernando Kallas, editing by Ed Osmond)

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