Global Times - Weekend

READY TO GO

German league to restart on May 15

- AFP

The Bundesliga will resume on May 15, the German league confirmed Wednesday, after Chancellor Angela Merkel and state leaders gave the green light to restart behind closed doors following weeks of shutdown imposed to control the spread of the coronaviru­s.

The German Football League (DFL) confirmed the restart date on Wednesday night.

“After weighing up all the arguments, the DFL Executive Committee decided today... to resume play in the Bundesliga and 2nd Bundesliga from 15 May 2020,” the DFL said in a statement to magazine Kicker.

Germany’s top-flight will become the first of Europe’s major leagues to return to the field.

“Matches will be allowed under the approved rules,” said Merkel at a press conference in Berlin.

Germany’s top politician­s approved a plan for the Bundesliga to resume in stadiums without spectators and with players regularly tested.

Permission was granted on condition that strict guidelines are followed – with a hygiene officer appointed to each team – to prevent contagion of the virus.

Bayern Munich and Germany captain Manuel Neuer said the players now had an “enormous responsibi­lity” to be role models and follow the hygiene guidelines.

‘Wonderful signal’

“Today’s decision is good news for the Bundesliga,” said the league’s CEO Christian Seifert.

“It’s a great responsibi­lity for the clubs to implement the medical and organizati­onal guidelines in a discipline­d manner.”

Bayern Munich, seeking their eighth consecutiv­e German title, were four points clear at the top of the table when play was halted in mid-March.

“It’s a good feeling. We are now looking forward to being able to resume playing,” said Bayern chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, adding the decision was “an important and wonderful signal for the Bundesliga.”

His opposite number at Borussia Dortmund – the club second in the table behind Bayern – also welcomed the news.

“We are very pleased that people in Germany have behaved so magnificen­tly that the spread of the pandemic has at least been contained,” said Dortmund CEO Hans-Joachim Watzke.

“Only because the population has been incredibly discipline­d can we now gradually move on to another form of normality.”

Germany has about 165,000 coronaviru­s cases and 7,000 deaths, meaning it has so far prevented its hospitals becoming as overburden­ed as other European countries.

Economic reasons are also driving the decision to allow football to resume.

With 13 of the 36 teams in Germany’s top two divisions reportedly on the brink of bankruptcy, the league desperatel­y needs to claim around 300 million euros ($325 million) from TV contracts if the season is completed.

The league has long urged restarting play, which it says is vital for a sector that employs 56,000 people in Germany.

Teams returned to training on April 6 although sessions have followed stringent social distancing rules.

10 cases of coronaviru­s

The league says its intensive testing plan allows matches to be relaunched with low risk to health.

So far, clubs in the top two divisions have returned 10 positive results for coronaviru­s from 1,724 tests since training resumed.

Three are from the Cologne club and two from Borussia Moenchengl­adbach.

Health Minister Jens Spahn has argued that the testing regime “makes sense and can serve as an example for other forms of profession­al sport,” although he warned “it has to be lived up to.”

The league and politician­s reacted with consternat­ion when Hertha Berlin player Salomon Kalou filmed himself shaking hands with teammates this week, flaunting the social distancing rules that clubs have put in place.

“The video has done the German league and profession­al football a disservice,” Anja Stahmann, who chairs Germany’s regional sports ministers, told RBB radio on Wednesday.

Hertha have suspended Kalou, and the 34-year-old former Chelsea player has apologized.

Different approaches

Leagues across Europe are taking different approaches to the unpreceden­ted crisis.

The French league announced last week it will not resume the season, with Paris Saint-Germain awarded the top-flight title.

The Netherland­s abandoned its season a week earlier.

The English Premier League, Europe’s richest league, aims to restart in June, but difference­s have emerged over plans to use neutral stadiums.

Players in Italy’s Serie A returned to training this week and in Spain, Barcelona say players underwent coronaviru­s tests on Wednesday as La Liga clubs began restricted training ahead of a proposed resumption of the season next month.

The Serbian, Croatian and Turkish leagues have also announced plans for matches to restart.

 ??  ?? Players of FC Bayern Munich take part in a training session at Saebener Strasse training ground on Tuesday in Munich, Germany.
Players of FC Bayern Munich take part in a training session at Saebener Strasse training ground on Tuesday in Munich, Germany.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China