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Paredes Out, Laporte Limited: Athletic Club Injury Concerns Deepen

Luigi ArrietaBy Luigi Arrieta·March 17, 2026
Paredes Out, Laporte Limited: Athletic Club Injury Concerns Deepen

Athletic Club’s injury crisis in defense has deepened, with central defender Paredes still unavailable and fellow defender Laporte training away from the main group at the club’s Lezama training complex. The absences stem from Athletic’s Copa del Rey return leg against Real Sociedad, leaving manager Ernesto Valverde facing lineup challenges heading into a critical stretch of the season.

Defensive Depth Test at Athletic Club

Paredes has not trained with the squad since the Copa del Rey second-leg clash against Real Sociedad, a match that appears to have triggered the center-back’s ongoing absence. The player from Arrigorriaga, a municipality in the Basque Country, has been unavailable for multiple matchdays, forcing Athletic Club to shuffle its defensive options. Club officials have not disclosed a specific return date, leaving uncertainty about when the defender will rejoin full team activities.

Laporte’s situation presents a different scenario. Unlike Paredes’s complete absence from group training, Laporte has been working separately at Lezama under what appears to be a modified training protocol. This approach typically signals a player progressing through injury rehabilitation but not yet cleared for full contact work with teammates. The separation suggests Laporte is moving toward availability, though his participation remains restricted.

For Athletic Club, managing defensive personnel during a demanding fixture schedule tests the club’s squad depth and coaching staff flexibility. Real Sociedad’s Copa del Rey tie proved costly not just in terms of advancement but in player availability, a reminder that domestic cup competitions carry hidden injury risks alongside their competitive stakes.

Timeline and Recovery Outlook

The Copa del Rey return leg served as a turning point for Athletic’s defensive roster. While exact injury classifications remain internal club information, the pattern of absences suggests muscle or soft-tissue issues common to football’s competitive calendar. Paredes’s extended absence—spanning multiple training sessions—indicates a more conservative recovery approach, potentially prioritizing full fitness over rushed return timelines.

Laporte’s partial training involvement suggests a faster recovery trajectory. Clubs typically move injured players to separate sessions when they near readiness but require additional conditioning work away from tactical intensity. His presence at Lezama, even in limited capacity, provides a positive signal compared to Paredes’s complete absence from group training.

Athletic Club’s medical staff faces the classic coaching dilemma: balance competitive urgency against long-term player availability. With a full season still ahead, premature returns risk recurring injuries that extend absences further. The decision to keep Laporte separate rather than fully absent suggests this calculus is already influencing daily training decisions.

Impact on Latin American Football

While Paredes and Laporte represent Spanish and European-based talent respectively, their injury management offers instructive lessons for Latin American coaching systems and clubs. Latin American football has increasingly emphasized aggressive playing styles and compact fixture schedules, creating similar injury pressures facing Athletic Club. Young Colombian, Argentine, Brazilian, and Venezuelan defenders currently in European academies or competing in regional championships can study how established clubs like Athletic navigate defensive absences without compromising competitive standards.

The incident also underscores why Copa del Rey participation, though domestically important, demands respect for player recovery protocols. Many Latin American clubs participate in similarly demanding continental tournaments—Copa Libertadores, Copa Sudamericana, and regional championships—where injury management becomes critical to season-long success. Athletic Club’s cautious approach to Paredes and Laporte reflects professional standards that younger Latin American players should recognize as essential to career longevity.

What’s Next for Athletic Club

Athletic Club must navigate upcoming fixtures with adjusted defensive configurations while monitoring both players’ recovery progress. Laporte’s separate training could evolve into full group participation within days or weeks, depending on progression. Paredes’s timeline remains less certain, suggesting Athletic should prepare alternative lineup combinations for the immediate future.

The broader lesson resonates across Latin American football: managing injuries demands sophisticated medical support, player communication, and coaching flexibility. As young Latin American athletes advance to European clubs like Athletic, understanding how established institutions handle adversity—both tactical and medical—becomes part of professional football education. Athletic Club’s careful approach demonstrates that competitive success and player welfare advance together, not against each other.

Luigi Arrieta
Luigi Arrieta Autor

Fundador de Smidrat, la plataforma que conecta deportistas jóvenes con scouts y clubes en Latinoamérica. Apasionado por el deporte y la tecnología, trabaja para que el talento no pase desapercibido.

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