The article below says Oliver's injury appears to be only short term.
Not your average hammy: Optimism for Oliver after surprising Monday development (sen.com.au)
BY
SEB MOTTRAM 14 HOURS AGO
Clayton Oliver’s hamstring injury might not be as bad as first reported following a twist to the case.
The three-time All-Australian
trained and even ran on Monday, three days after suffering the injury in Melbourne’s four-point loss to Port Adelaide on Friday night.
Oliver grabbed at his leg late in the third term before playing out the clash. SEN’s Sam Edmund confirms scans have revealed some damage to the 25-year-old’s left hamstring.
However, he told SEN’s Sportsday that it’s
not your average hamstring injury.
“Something of a strange one at Melbourne in the aftermath of Clayton Oliver’s hamstring injury... because he trained today.
In fact, he ran at training today, so this is quite a unique situation,” Edmund said on SEN's Sportsday.
“Scans have shown some hamstring damage. But this is
not your typical hamstring tear, this is not your set-and-forget three-week hamstring…
“
He will miss some football, but Melbourne is refusing to say how much football he’ll miss because it will depend on how Clayton feels.
“
He trained today, he felt good he said and he’s pulled up well… he grabbed for it straight away when he kicked but he played out the game and I think unless you saw that incident, you’d be none the wiser.
“Then he’s gone and trained today. So watch this space on Clayton Oliver. When is a hamstring not a hamstring? Apparently now at Melbourne.”
Meanwhile,
Melbourne says Oliver will be unavailable for the short term but put no direct timeframe on his return.
“Clayton had some soreness at the end of the game and following a clinical assessment from the physios and the medical team, scans have shown that he’s got a hamstring strain,”
high performance manager Selwyn Griffith told the club's website.
“At this early stage, we anticipate Clayton won’t be available in the short term.
“His return to play will ultimately be guided by his ability to deal with increase loads and reconditioning. As such, we will have greater clarity as Clayton progresses through his program.”
Oliver finished the game with 30 disposals and eight clearances to be among Melbourne’s leading players despite the loss.
He’s missed only one game since the 2016 season in becoming a model of consistency for the league’s dominant midfield.