The Niagara Falls Review

Australian rugby league back after two-month virus break

- JOHN PYE

With the sound of skin slapping skin and an echoing oomph of air escaping lungs as players collided at pace, the National Rugby League led the charge for elite sports returning to action in Australia.

It was the furthest thing from the strict social distancing regulation­s that have been the norm in Australia in the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Parramatta flew in just four hours before kickoff and still beat the Brisbane Broncos, 34-6, on Thursday night in an empty Suncorp Stadium, the lack of spectators being a tradeoff for the NRL being allowed to resume following a two-month hiatus.

While a television audience heard artificial crowd noise piped into the broadcast, in real time it was a vastly different experience.

Clear and distinct were onfield exchanges usually drowned out by crowd noise, such as players calling moves and the referee laying down the law.

The opening bone-jarring collision between Parramatta forward Regan Campbell-Gillard and Broncos tacklers signalled a genuine easing of the lockdown when it was broadcast across Australia in prime time. It was the first live action in any elite sport here since March 22.

The 52,500-seat Suncorp Stadium is locally known as The Cauldron, for its infamously unfriendly welcome to visiting teams.

But there was no hostile reception for Parramatta, with only 250 people allowed into the stadium, including players and others deemed necessary to stage the game.

Caxton Street, which runs toward the stadium and is usually swarming with fans on a game night, was eerily quiet.

Restaurant­s and bars are restricted to a maximum of 10 guests, and fans have been urged not to gather around stadiums. Although there were some exceptions.

Mike Simpson and Peter Rowe, self-described “rugby league tragics,” drove for an hour, and parked on a street adjacent to the stadium that is usually off limits at game time. They set up chairs, leaning against the stadium, shared a pizza and watched the game — from across the road and through a window — on a big TV in a bar.

“This is the next best thing,”

Simpson said. “Big screen TV, outside Suncorp Stadium. You can’t get much better. We live and breathe it.”

Suncorp is one of six stadiums being used during the first phase of the NRL’s resumption. The next phase, a proposal to have fans back in the stadiums by July 1, has been criticized as “absurd and dangerous” by the Australian Medical Associatio­n.

Two rounds of matches were played in the NRL — the first with fans, the second without — before Australia went into lockdown in a bid to slow the spread of COVID-19. Australia has recorded 7,150 cases and 103 known deaths, although the rate of infections is now low. The New Zealand Warriors underwent two weeks of quarantine in Australia to satisfy new biosecurit­y requiremen­ts for a return to play, and will be in action on Saturday against the Dragons — one of seven NRL games over the next three days.

Everyone has to undergo heat checks before entering the stadium, and Broncos halfback Brodie Croft had to go into isolation briefly after two slightly high readings before a third temperatur­e test cleared him to play. He scored the Broncos’ only try.

 ?? SCOTT DAVIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Parramatta’s Marata Niukore reaches out to score a try against Brisbane as the NRL resumes play.
SCOTT DAVIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Parramatta’s Marata Niukore reaches out to score a try against Brisbane as the NRL resumes play.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada