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Winston coming through his woes

Winston Reid is coming through after seven months on the sidelines and has spoken of his hopes for a first team return.

The New Zealander, who fell awkwardly in the match against Swansea in March, has undergone surgery and hopes that the comeback is close.

And speaking to www.whufc.com he said: “Everything is going well. Obviously, when you have an operation you never know how things are going to look on the other side, but it’s going better than we thought so that’s positive.

“Obviously it is frustrating to be out for long periods of time, especially with the way it happened, but you have to get through it and you have to deal with it.

“There’s not so much I could have done about what happened. It’s not like I’m someone who is repeatedly pulling my hamstrings.

“This was just one of those unfortunate injuries you hope not to get in your career, but football is a contact sport and it’s just one of those things you have to deal with.

“Fortunately enough, I am a little bit older and I am probably able to deal with it better with an injury like this than if I was in my early twenties and in the early part of my career.”

“I’m doing gym work at the moment, rehabbing the quad and the leg and getting the bulk back.  To be fair, everything after the operation has gone really, really well, touch wood, and there has been no swelling.

“So, we’re training harder and pushing harder every day to get fitter and get my knee better, so I can get back on the pitch as soon as possible.

“It’s tough coming into a place and knowing you can’t play for a period of months but it is what it is and you get on with it.

“There is a cap on how much you can do in a certain period, so the progression can feel slow, so it’s tough at times, but once I get outside on the pitch and run, I’ll begin to feel like a footballer again.”

“Once I get to that stage, back out on the pitch, it’ll progress a lot quicker and I’ll see the guys and talk to them, rather than being in the gym working .

“I go to every game and encourage the guys to do well and I want us to kick on and, likewise, they encourage me to put the work in to get myself back in action, so it’s good.”

 

About Hugh5outhon1895

Hugh Southon is a lifelong Iron and the founding editor of ClaretandHugh. He is a national newspaper journalist of many years experience and was Bobby Moore's 'ghost' writer during the great man's lifetime. He describes ClaretandHugh as "the Hammers daily newspaper!" Follow on Twitter @hughsouthon

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