Malta Independent

Salzburg players out of national teams after 6 virus cases

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Austrian soccer club Salzburg stopped its players from joining their national teams yesterday after six coronaviru­s cases were found in the squad.

The Austrian champions said they received results on Sunday showing six positive tests among players who were due to head to their national teams during the internatio­nal break. Salzburg hasn't named the players and said they were all in isolation and no one was showing symptoms.

The cases cause yet more disruption for upcoming internatio­nal games as coronaviru­s case numbers rise across Europe. Clubs in Germany and Italy have also delayed releasing players or refused to release them.

Salzburg said everyone at the club tested negative in samples taken on Friday before the team drew with Rapid Vienna 1-1 on Sunday. Another round of testing was planned for yesterday.

The club said "all internatio­nal callups ... have also been rejected for now" and the situation could change once players have undergone more tests.

Midfielder Dominik Szboszlai was in line to miss Hungary's playoff game against Iceland on Thursday for a place at next year's European Championsh­ip. Hungary also has upcoming Nations League games against Serbia and Turkey.

The positive tests at Salzburg could leave Austria needing replacemen­ts ahead of its upcoming games. Salzburg goalkeeper Cican Stankovic and defenders Andreas Ulmer and Albert Vallci were all named in the Austria squad last week.

Austria plays Luxembourg in a friendly on Wednesday and then Nations League games against Northern Ireland and Norway.

Mali will have to cope without Salzburg midfielder Mohamed Camara and forward Sekou Koita. Midfielder Masaya Okugawa was in line to make his debut for Japan in upcoming friendlies.

Last week, German clubs Werder Bremen and Arminia Bielefeld said they wouldn't release players for national team duty, citing local health regulation­s. Their decisions affected numerous teams, including the United States and Serbia.

In Italy, Roma and Fiorentina's squads were in isolation after positive tests. That has stopped players who tested negative from joining their national teams.

British restrictio­ns on entry for people who have been in Denmark led to the Danish team replacing players from English clubs.

FIFA said last month clubs could refuse to release players who faced at least five days in quarantine on their return. Normally clubs can face sanctions if they don't let players join their national teams.

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