Stoke City’s ongoing injury crisis has become the defining feature of their winter campaign, leaving manager Mark Robins searching for stability and a clear tactical direction amid constant disruption.
Images from the club’s recent FA Cup fourth-round clash with Fulham at the bet365 Stadium captured the scale of the problem. Key figures such as Divin Mubama, Junior Tchamadeu, Lewis Baker and Bosun Lawal were reduced to spectators in the stands, symbolising a squad stretched to its limits. In total, nine players who would likely have been in contention to start were unavailable. Ben Gibson had only just recovered from illness, while Ben Pearson was fit enough merely for a place on the bench.
The list of absentees underlines the severity of the situation: Viktor Johansson (shoulder), Gavin Bazunu (thigh), Bosun Lawal (hamstring), Junior Tchamadeu (knee), Lewis Baker (ankle), Ato Ampah (toe), Divin Mubama (ankle), Róbert Boženík (shoulder) and Sam Gallagher (hamstring). Although there is hope that several could return in early March, Robins has been careful not to commit to firm timelines, wary of further setbacks.
Speaking after the Fulham defeat, Robins was keen to acknowledge the context without sounding as though he were making excuses. He stressed that the volume of injuries cannot be ignored, especially when competing against a Premier League side filled with quality. While he avoided dwelling on misfortune, he made it clear that the situation has placed significant strain on his squad.
Earlier in the season, five of the sidelined players had been central to Stoke’s encouraging start. Even as results began to dip before the injury list worsened, Robins maintained that his team remained competitive in nearly every fixture up until mid-December, with the exception of a difficult away trip to Sheffield United. Narrow defeats to Hull and Leicester proved frustrating, while contests against Coventry and Ipswich were closely fought.
However, the growing number of absentees has inevitably altered Stoke’s rhythm. Robins’ ability to influence matches with substitutions has been limited, greater physical and mental demands have been placed on those who remain fit, and several players have been deployed in unfamiliar roles to plug gaps. The cumulative effect has disrupted momentum at a crucial stage of the campaign.
Following the match against Charlton, Robins took a step back to reassess his approach, determined to maximise the resources still available. That reflection led to a tactical shift against Fulham, with Stoke adopting a wing-back system. The change was designed to utilise the club’s relative strength at centre-half and provide greater support for new signing Milan Smit in attack.
Robins admitted the system had been under consideration for several days and suggested its long-term use remains uncertain. While the squad contains players capable of operating in that shape, it was not originally constructed with that formation in mind. With wingers still part of the mix, Robins emphasised the importance of producing coherent, organised performances regardless of the tactical setup. Against Fulham, he felt the team achieved that cohesion, even if the result ultimately fell short.
The manager insisted the ambition was always to win and progress in the cup rather than merely compete respectably. Although Stoke came close, Robins expressed frustration at being labelled an “almost” team. Nevertheless, he drew encouragement from aspects of the display that can be carried into the final 14 Championship fixtures of the season.
Stoke now turn their focus back to league action, hosting Leicester next weekend, as Robins continues to balance recovery timelines, tactical adjustments and the search for renewed consistency in a campaign heavily shaped by injury adversity.











