Kuwait Times

Return of Serie A: The key questions

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ROME: Uncertaint­y swirls as to whether Serie A can really return to action as Italian football bosses hope on June 13 after a two-month coronaviru­s suspension. Behind the united front, Italy’s 20 top-flight clubs have very different interests while Sports Minister Vincenzo Spadafora has been blowing hot and cold.

Meanwhile, the players may be back in individual training but are themselves divided in the face of a very strict protocol required for group sessions which begin on May 18.

Here AFP sport looks at the key questions over a return to ‘Calcio’ in football-mad Italy.

WHAT IS THE STUMBLING BLOCK?

— Lega Serie A announced on Wednesday that June 13 was the date they hoped to resume the championsh­ip, with expectatio­ns boosted the following day when the influentia­l president of the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI) Giovanni Malago declared he was “99 percent” certain it would restart. But the optimism only lasted a few hours. On Thursday evening, a press release from the League and then another from the profession­al players’ union (AIC) made it clear that the resumption of collective training, scheduled for Monday, remains very uncertain.

Many clubs consider that the health protocol, painstakin­gly drawn up by the Italian football federation (FIGC) following recommenda­tions of the government’s Technical and Scientific Committee, is impossible to enforce.

Two points are proving particular­ly problemati­c. The first concerns the logistical difficulti­es for clubs to try and organise a two-week group training period from next Monday. Players would theoretica­lly have to practice together, then eat and sleep at the training centre or a hotel entirely available to the team to avoid any risk of contagion. Many clubs do not have these facilities.

The second concerns the government insistence on quarantine for the entire team and staff, in the event of a positive test. Italian clubs favour the German model, where only the infected person is quarantine­d. “It’s something that worries us,” FIGC president Gabriele Gravina said Friday of group quarantine, as he conceded the possibilit­y of playoffs was still being examined.

WHO IS FOR, WHO AGAINST?

— On Friday, the FIGC and Liga Serie A met and prepared new proposals to submit to Italy’s ministers for sport and health. But the common front that the world of Italian football had managed to present in difficult discussion­s with the government seems to have cracked. According to all the sports media, Inter Milan are at the forefront of the “revolt”. Others followed, such as AC Milan, Atalanta, Napoli, Fiorentina, Sampdoria and Genoa. In total, more than half of all Serie A clubs would be opposed to the idea of training next Monday without more guarantees.

Some, especially those at the bottom of the table, may have more to gain with a season definitive­ly stopped. Others, like Lazio, are still pushing for a return. The Roman club are second, just one point behind Juventus when football was suspended on March 9 and firmly believe in their chances of a first title in two decades.

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