James Rodriguez has been hospitalised in Minnesota after suffering severe dehydration following Colombia’s friendly defeat to France, in a health scare that briefly pulled one of the team’s biggest names out of normal recovery and into medical observation. The Colombian federation said the midfielder developed symptoms the day after the match and remained under hospital monitoring for 72 hours.
Rodriguez played 63 minutes in Colombia’s 3-1 loss to France in Landover, Maryland, before returning to Minneapolis, where he later entered hospital. The federation said the condition was of non-sports-related origin and made clear it was not linked to a musculoskeletal injury or to his football activity.
What Colombia said about Rodriguez’s condition
The federation’s statement tried to remove panic from the situation without understating it. It confirmed that Rodriguez required hospitalisation for preventive monitoring and recovery after the dehydration episode, but also said his prognosis was favourable and that he was showing steady improvement. ESPN reported that he is now back at home recovering after being accompanied through the process by Minnesota United’s medical team.
Why the update matters
This is not just a routine player fitness note. Rodriguez remains Colombia’s captain and one of the most recognisable figures in the squad as the team prepares for the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Colombia named him in its group for the France and Croatia friendlies after his recent return to club action, underlining how central he remains to the side despite his changing club career.
The club context around the scare
The timing also matters because Rodriguez only joined Minnesota United in February on a short-term deal through June 2026, with an option to extend to December. That made the hospitalisation an immediate concern both for Colombia and for his new club, even though the latest medical update points toward recovery rather than a longer-term absence.
What comes next
For now, the priority is simple: recovery, not speculation. The federation has already ruled out a muscle injury, and the latest update points to improvement, but the scare still serves as a reminder of how quickly a routine international window can shift into a medical concern when a key player is involved.
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