Stabroek News

AFL decides to press ahead with 2020 season

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MELBOURNE, (Reuters) - The Australian Football League (AFL) will press ahead with the opening weekend of the top flight Australian rules season despite new measures to control the coronaviru­s introduced by the government.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison yesterday declared a “human biosecurit­y emergency” which he said could last at least six months, telling the country’s citizens to abandon travel abroad and avoid gatherings of more than 100 people.

AFL boss Gillon McLachlan told a news conference the 18-team competitio­n’s regular season would kick off as scheduled today when Richmond take on

Carlton behind closed doors at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG).

“We start tomorrow night with confidence ... that our players are well placed to bear the proportion­ate risk of playing a contact sport,” McLachlan said.

“We commence tomorrow night on government advice that putting on a game sits within the newly-establishe­d protocols and guidelines announced by the Prime Minister this morning.

“We don’t know how many games we will get into this 153-game journey before we have to pause but ... tonight our industry is unified in making a decision to start.” The season had already been shortened to 17 rounds of matches from the usual 22 and McLachlan announced the length of each quarter would be reduced from 20 to 16 minutes in duration.

The AFL had already banned fans indefinite­ly from matches following government advice last week to shut down events involving crowds of 500 or more.

The league is one of the world’s bestattend­ed with average crowds of about 35,000 last year.

The National Rugby League, the most popular profession­al winter sport in the country’s eastern states, started its season this week and will continue without spectators this weekend.

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