Shanghai Daily

Bundesliga to end season without fans due to virus

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GERMANY does not expect fans to be allowed back into Bundesliga matches until next season.

Games in all major European football leagues have to be played in empty stadiums due to the second wave of coronaviru­s cases leading to a tightening of pandemic restrictio­ns across the continent.

Christian Seifert, CEO of the top two men’s leagues in Germany, said he presumes there will be no change to the policy before the end of the season.

“In any case (of a fan return), not in a significan­t number. If we had ruled out games without fans from the start as some people demanded, the system would have collapsed,” Seifert said in comments recently published by the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Sonntagsze­itung newspaper.

“And no one at (the league) or the clubs wants to have games without fans either. However, we still have them because they are the only permitted option for hosting games, and presumably we will have them until the end of the season.”

Germany started the 2020-21 season with a six-week trial in September and

October of limited numbers of fans allowed at games, up to 20 percent of the stadium capacity depending on the local coronaviru­s case numbers.

The trial was part of a wide-ranging deal between German state and federal politician­s and was not extended after the number of virus cases soared across the country.

The last major soccer nation to bring back fans was England, which allowed small numbers of supporters at some games last month in a scheme that was shut down weeks later as the country entered a renewed lockdown.

“The focus now is on completing the season,” said Premier League chief executive Richard Masters.

“We don’t know when fans are going to be allowed back. It’s difficult to guess,” added Masters.

“Obviously we’re hugely optimistic that by the start of next season the vaccinatio­n program will have returned this country to some sense of normality and we can have fans back from the start of next season.”

Games in Italy, Spain and France are also being played without spectators.

 ??  ?? Wolfsburg’s Wout Weghorst, (right, second row) scores a penalty past Union Berlin’s goalkeeper Andreas
Luthe during a German Bundesliga soccer match. — AFP
Wolfsburg’s Wout Weghorst, (right, second row) scores a penalty past Union Berlin’s goalkeeper Andreas Luthe during a German Bundesliga soccer match. — AFP

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