Corona Shuts Down Football in Europe
The outbreak
of the coronavirus has shut down all sporting activites especially football in
Europe.
All Uefa
competitions, including Champions League and Europa League matches due to be
played next week, have been postponed because of the coronavirus outbreak.
The draws
for the next rounds, set for 20 March, have also been postponed.
In the
Champions League, Manchester City v Real Madrid, Juventus v Lyon, Barcelona v
Napoli and Bayern Munich v Chelsea are all postponed.
Manchester
United, Wolves and Rangers' matches in the Europa League are off.
All Uefa Youth
League quarter-final matches scheduled for 17 and 18 March are also off.
Uefa said
further decisions on the scheduling of the postponed fixtures "will be
communicated in due course".
European
football's governing body has invited representatives from all 55 of its member
associations to a meeting on Tuesday in order to discuss a response to the
coronavirus outbreak.
The
scheduling of Euro 2020 will be discussed at the gathering.
More than
125,000 people have been diagnosed with coronavirus in 118 countries around the
world, according to the World Health Organization. The total number of deaths
is more than 4,600.
In France, Football
in France's top two divisions has been suspended immediately "until
further notice" because of coronavirus.
Ligue de
Football Professionnel (LFP) - French football's governing body - said the
decision to suspend Ligue 1 and 2 was made "unanimously" by the board
of directors on Friday.
The LFP said
"collective interest must be placed above everything".
"The
urgency today is to curb the epidemic, protect the most vulnerable, and avoid
displacement," it added.
Games in
France were already to be played behind closed doors after a ban on all
gatherings of more than 1,000 people to prevent the spread of Covid-19
LFP's board
of directors is set to meet again after Uefa's meeting on Tuesday, which
will discuss the postponement of all domestic and European competitions,
including Euro 2020.
Uefa announced
on Friday that all European club competitions, including the Champions
League and Europa League, due to be played on 17 and 18 March had been
postponed.
Elite
football in Britain has also been suspended until at least 3 April as a result
of the spread of coronavirus.
All games in
England's Premier League, EFL, FA Women's Super League and Women's Championship
are postponed.
The Premier
League said play will start on 4 April subject to "conditions at the
time" but BBC sports editor Dan Roan says resuming on the date is
privately deemed "almost impossible".
Matches
in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are also off.
England's
international friendly matches against Italy on 27 March and Denmark four days
later are off.
The EFL,
which hopes to resume play a day earlier than the Premier League on 3 April,
said clubs were also advised to suspend "non-essential activities"
such as "player appearances, training ground visits and fan meetings"
The
suspension comes in a week of widespread sporting postponements worldwide.
Late on
Thursday it was announced Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta had tested positive for
the virus, and early on Friday Chelsea striker Callum Hudson-Odoi revealed he
had been affected, while Everton say a first-team player has shown symptoms.
Earlier this
week, several clubs - including Arsenal, Chelsea, Leicester City, Bournemouth,
Manchester City, Juventus and Real Madrid revealed they have either all or some
of their playing staff in self-isolation.
Premier
League chief executive Richard Masters said: "In this unprecedented
situation, we are working closely with our clubs, government, the FA and EFL
and can reassure everyone the health and welfare of players, staff and
supporters are our priority."
The Premier
League said its "aim is to reschedule the displaced fixtures", while
the Football Association said "all parties are committed at this time to
trying to complete this season's domestic fixture programme".
In total, 10
people have now died in the UK with the virus and there have been 596 confirmed
cases across the country.
On Thursday
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said suspending major public events such as
sporting fixtures was being considered by the government but would be a measure
primarily to protect public services, rather than delay the spread.
The EFL
said: "This decision has not been taken lightly, but the EFL must
prioritise the health and well-being of players, staff and supporters while
also acknowledging the government's national efforts in tackling this
outbreak."
These are
deeply turbulent times in English football and across world sport which is
having to face up to a period of disruption and dislocation unprecedented in
peacetime.
Privately,
all parties admit that resuming matches in early April when the initial
suspension will be reviewed will be almost impossible.
But the hope
is that next week a decision is taken to postpone Euro 2020 for a year, thereby
freeing up space in the calendar to reschedule outstanding matches and complete
domestic league seasons across the continent at some stage.
This action
goes against the government's highly controversial advice to continue staging
sports events despite mass gatherings being closed or cancelled across the world.
But
Department for Culture Media and Sport officials are known to be supportive of
the decision football authorities have taken, given the need to protect
employees and the mounting cases of players contracting the virus.
The problem
is that the outbreak is expected to be at its peak in May and June so if the
suspension keeps on being extended, some clubs may start to push for the season
to be declared void, a nightmare scenario for clubs like Liverpool and Leeds,
who both stand on the brink of long-awaited glory.
But as it
stands, there seems to be a determination to complete the season if at all
possible.
Simply
stopping the season as it stands now seems unlikely given it would run the risk
of legal action from clubs relegated or denied promotion.
The EFL is
expected to ask the government for financial help for some of the clubs who now
face even more financial uncertainty but there is no guarantee this will be
possible in these extraordinary times.
Football has
also been suspended in Italy, Spain, France, the Netherlands, Portugal and the
USA.
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