Swansea coach Carlos Carvalhal hopes Renato Sanches can help in survival battle

Phil Blanche 21:03 08/03/2018
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  • Carlos Carvalhal expects Renato Sanches to rejoin Swansea‘s Premier League survival battle this month after returning to his native Portugal to recover from injury.

    Sanches has not featured for Swansea since damaging a hamstring in an FA Cup fourth-round tie against Notts County on January 27.

    The on-loan Bayern Munich midfielder lasted only 32 minutes at Meadow Lane after suffering a similar injury in the previous round at Wolves three weeks earlier.

    “I believe Renato will be available to start training and be ready this month,” Carvalhal said ahead of Saturday’s league trip to Huddersfield.

    “He has missed a lot of weeks to be in a normal physical condition.

    “It will take a bit of time for him to try and help the team but I believe he will be ready to be involved in the 18.”

    Sanches has spent part of his rehabilitation in Portugal after the 20-year-old requested to return home.

    Carlos Carvalhal 1

    Carvalhal said Swansea agreed to that request because the club felt the warmer weather would speed up Sanches’ recovery time.

    “He did one part of the regeneration here and one part of the recovery he requested to go to Portugal because of the weather,” Carvalhal said.

    “The weather can help a lot with this muscular problem, it is more difficult to recover in the cold.

    “We decided that part of the recovery he could go there because it is a standard thing.

    “We agreed that he can be near the family in different weather to try and be 100 per cent quicker.

    “But he will be here now to do the final part of the recovery.”

    Swansea climbed five places to 13th after beating West Ham 4-1 last weekend – their biggest win of the season – and move above Huddersfield on goal difference.

    That represented another significant step for a team who were bottom of the table and five points adrift of safety when Carvalhal took over at the end of December.

    “When I arrived people said that to stay in the Premier League – like I expect – will be some kind of miracle,” Carvalhal said.

    “But this is not something that is divine, it is part of this world and about hard work.

    “We are fighting and we have used a lot of water to put things in a good way.

    “But it is like a forest where the fire can start again if you do not check for it.”

    Swansea expect veteran midfielder Leon Britton, who returned as a substitute against West Ham after a four-month absence, to shrug off a twinge in his back and take his place in the squad.

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