Coronavirus: Germany's Bundesliga to Resume Behind Closed Doors on 16 May

The
Bundesliga will resume behind closed doors on 16 May, becoming the first
European league to restart following the coronavirus shutdown.
One of the
games on the day of relaunch will be the derby between Schalke and Borussia
Dortmund.
Champions
Bayern Munich, who are four points clear at the top of the table, travel to
Union Berlin on Sunday.
Most teams
have nine games to play, with the final weekend of the season rescheduled for
27-28 June.
The German
Football Association (DFB) said the season would resume under strict health
protocols that ban fans from the stadium and require players to have Covid-19
testing.
About 300
people, including players, staff and officials, will be in or around the
stadiums during match days.
The league
has been suspended since 13 March. Clubs returned to training in mid-April,
with players working in groups.
Christian
Seifert, chief executive of the German Football League, said "it was
crucial to resume play" despite empty stands and other restrictions.
On
Wednesday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel eased some restrictions,
allowing shops to reopen after fewer than 7,000 deaths with coronavirus.
Seifert
said: "The matches will feel different. After the first matchday, we will
all know why we prefer games with fans. But that is the framework we have to
operate in and I expect the best possible sport within this framework."
Uefa
president Aleksander Ceferin said he is "confident that Germany will
provide a shining example" to the world of football on how to return to
action.
"This
is a huge and positive step to bringing optimism back to people's lives. It is
the result of constructive dialogue and careful planning between the football
authorities and politicians," he said.
Meanwhile,
the executive committee of the World Players Association, which represents
85,000 players and athletes across world sport, will meet next week to discuss
medical protocols around the return to sport.
It said in a
statement: "All proposals need to be calmly and rigorously assessed by
relevant experts with a clear commitment that player health and safety is not
negotiable."
Union Berlin
face leaders Bayern on the Sunday when the league returns but defender Neven
Subotic has been critical of how the situation has been handled by the
footballing authorities.
German
football will continue despite France's Ligue 1, the Netherlands' Eredivisie
and Belgium's Pro League being called off.
Subotic told
BBC's World Football programme: "It is a precarious situation for all of
us. It is going to be impossible to come out of the league with positive
remarks, it is just going to be a lot of risk management and trying to get to a
finished season with the fewest casualties.
"We are
not going to have games with fans and for me that is what makes it special.
Playing football is fun and is challenging but what makes it exceptional is the
community aspect of it.
"That
is gone and I don't want to pretend like it is not a huge thing. It is a huge
thing and it is what makes it special.
"Therefore
what I will definitely enjoy is the first game back with fans inside the
stadium. I am looking forward to that and that is my end goal."
It's going
to look, sound and feel very different but there is something very exciting
about finally having a start date for the resumption of one of the best leagues
in world football.
The German
Football League (DFL) boss Christian Seifert sounded a note of caution though
at his press conference, reinforcing the fact that this is quite a fragile
situation, saying "we're playing under probation" and adding that
they almost have to prove that their health and safety concepts are working on
every single match day.
A local
derby between fierce rivals Schalke and Borussia Dortmund is a great way to
start on paper but it will also highlight how much fans will be missed at these
big games and how disgruntled some of the supporters groups in Germany will be
about the Bundesliga being able to continue without them.
The eyes of
the Premier League, La Liga and Serie A will be firmly fixed on these early
games - because if Germany can make it work, maybe Europe's other major leagues
have a stronger chance too.
Fixtures
Saturday 16
May
Augsburg v
Wolfsburg
Borussia
Dortmund v Schalke
Eintracht
Frankfurt v Borussia Monchengladbach
Fortuna
Dusseldorf v Paderborn
Hoffenheim v
Hertha Berlin
RB Leipzig v
Freiburg
Sunday 17
May
Cologne v
Mainz
Union Berlin
v Bayern Munich
Monday 18
May
Werder
Bremen v Bayer Leverkusen
FROM .bbc.com/sport/football
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