The Borneo Post

Chinese football season to begin July 25 after five-month virus delay

-

BEIJING: The Chinese Super League season will begin on July 25 after the coronaviru­s pandemic delayed it by five months, the country’s football associatio­n said on Wednesday.

It is a major boost for sport in China and another sign of life returning to normality in the country where Covid-19 emerged late last year before spreading globally.

The 16-team league, which had been originally due to kick off in February, will be played under a different format instead of the usual home-and-away competitio­n.

Clubs will be split into two groups, one in the northeaste­rn city of Dalian and the other in Suzhou, near Shanghai, the China Football Associatio­n (CFA) said.

The CFA said the league would “strictly abide by the requiremen­ts of national epidemic prevention work”.

But the CFA statement did not say whether fans would be allowed to attend, or which teams will play in each group in the revamped format.

The CSL, which has drawn internatio­nal interest in recent years by luring big-name players and coaches on world-leading wages, had been scheduled to start on Feb 22.

However, it became one of the first sporting victims of the coronaviru­s in January when the new season was indefinite­ly postponed.

The CFA said in February that it would introduce an extra transfer window before the league started to help clubs struggling to complete player transfers due to the outbreak.

The Chinese Basketball Associatio­n ( CBA) became the first profession­al sports league in China to resume on June 20, although no fans are allowed to attend matches.

The CBA has similarly divided up into two groups in two cities to prevent the spread of infections.

There has only been one confirmed coronaviru­s case among Chinese Super League players – Shandong Luneng’s former Manchester United midfielder Marouane Fellaini.

The Belgian internatio­nal tested positive in March, just after returning to China for the new season, and spent three weeks in hospital.

Chinese clubs have endured a long pre-season as they awaited the new campaign, with most beginning their disrupted preparatio­ns at the start of the year.

The defending champions are Guangzhou Evergrande, coached by Italy’s 2006 World Cup-winning captain Fabio Cannavaro, but of their opponents from last season will be missing.

Cash-strapped Tianjin Tianhai disbanded during the shutdown and will be replaced by Roberto Donadoni’s Shenzhen FC, who were relegated last season.

Football leagues across the globe have returned to action in recent weeks with no spectators and strict virus prevention measures in place.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Marouane Fellaini of Shandong Luneng celebratin­g after scored during the Chinese Super League match between Shandong Luneng and Beijing Renhe in Jinan in China’s eastern Shandong province in this March 1, 2019 file photo.
— AFP photo Marouane Fellaini of Shandong Luneng celebratin­g after scored during the Chinese Super League match between Shandong Luneng and Beijing Renhe in Jinan in China’s eastern Shandong province in this March 1, 2019 file photo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia