Joao Felix ligament strain confirmed
Joao Felix is set for a spell on the sidelines after Atletico Madrid confirmed he suffered a grade two sprain to a right ankle ligament against Valencia.
Diego Simeone indicated the injury Joao Felix suffered in Atletico Madrid's LaLiga draw with Valencia on "could be serious" after the game, and his fears were confirmed not long after.
Joao Felix, who joined Atletico in a €126 million ($205.7 million) transfer in the close season, hobbled off with 10 minutes left at Wanda Metropolitano after twisting his ankle in a tussle for the ball with Dani Parejo.
The injury left the host, which had already used all three substitutions, with 10 men and Valencia quickly added insult to injury as Parejo bent home a stunning free-kick to equalise and claim a 1-1 draw.
"It did not seem much at first, but the doctors say it could be serious," Simeone said before the reports from his medical team came back.
Diego Costa opened the scoring for Atletico with a 36th-minute penalty, but this was another game in which he and strike partner Alvaro Morata struggled to take their chances.
The stalemate left Atletico fourth in LaLiga having failed to win five of its past six matches.
Simeone's men have scored just three goals in that run and have not been victorious at home in the top flight since a 3-2 defeat of Eibar on 2 September (AEST).
"Costa and Morata know that the only path is to keep working, to insist. Forwards know that when they score goals they are fantastic, and when they don't people point fingers," Simeone added.
"We are a new team, and we don't yet have balance to manage moments in games, above all when we need to suffer and position ourselves well and keep calm. But we are convinced we have players to do this, there is work to do, and I like that.
"Nobody thought this would be an easy season, I knew we would have a lot of work to do, to get the team balanced.
"In certain moments some people look to point fingers, others to work hard. Those who want to work hard will get on well with me. Those who point fingers won't.
"We are in a very good moment to work hard, and look to see who wants to work, and who does not like to work."
Valencia remains unbeaten in five league games, with coach Albert Celades heaping praise on his players, particularly Parejo, for earning a share of the spoils from a game in which they were often on the back foot.
"To come here against this team, we knew it would be difficult. The team responded in a brilliant way in the second half, showed a lot of personality and ambition," Celades said.
"It is a luxury for us to have a player like Parejo, with his personality. When he has the ball, things happen. I love the way he wants to play, to make others play, to cause problems for the opposition."