Waikato Times

An eerily empty new normal

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lockdown allowed him another six weeks to get over a serious concussion he suffered when he was struck on the head by a freekick during a Central League game last year.

He said the most challengin­g aspect would be policing mass gatherings of 100 people at venues that were not enclosed.

Ifill, who runs an academy in Nelson and Wairarapa, expected there to be one major change when football returns.

He expected clubs to shift away from paying players and recruiting from overseas as sponsorshi­p and gaming trust money dried up, but believed that would have long-term benefits for football in New Zealand.

‘‘If you’re looking to bring players from overseas, they can’t get into the country and where do you get the money from? I’d be embarrasse­d to go and ask somebody for sponsorshi­p right now.

‘‘I think it will change club football but I think it will change for the better.

‘‘A lot of clubs will have to invest in their youth and look to bring players through, and that’s what it should be about.’’

While a decision on when the country will move into level two is hygiene that will remind all players that these are challengin­g times.

Still, it is the absence of spectators at the games that will have the most profound impact.

Home teams might find that their advantage disappears and players who tap into the emotion provided from the stands will have to find other ways to motivate themselves.

In fact, the relationsh­ip between the fan and player is so important that NBA legend LeBron James recently said he wouldn’t want to play without spectators.

‘‘We play games without the fans? Nah, that’s impossible,’’ James said. ‘‘I ain’t playing if I ain’t got the fans in the crowd. That’s who I play for. I play for my team-mates, and I play for the fans.’’

James later walked back those remarks a touch, but his point remains.

There is a bigger picture, however. Sport has to start due on Monday, Ifill believed it would take two weeks for players to reach a level of fitness required to be competitiv­e and suggested increasing the number of substituti­ons from three to five as a temporary measure.

NZ Football has previously indicated that football will not resume any earlier than May 30. somewhere. The revenue tap needs to be turned on, even if it just a dribble to start with.

There will be complaints that crowd-free games are ‘simply for Sky’ but without the broadcaste­r New Zealand Rugby’s books turn blood red and we decrease the chances of getting to the stage when games are held in full stadia again.

New Zealand’s franchises are meeting remotely this weekend to get the national game up and running again.

There is clearly some a lot of detail to get through before they announce a plan early next week of what the Super Rugby Aotearoa competitio­n looks like.

The only guarantee is that it will be quieter and possibly even confrontin­g when we see all those empty seats.

However, in the coronaviru­s era sports fans would be prepared to live with that.

 ?? ROBERT KITCHIN/STUFF ?? Paul Ifill, left, in action for Wairarapa United during a Central League match against Western Suburbs.
ROBERT KITCHIN/STUFF Paul Ifill, left, in action for Wairarapa United during a Central League match against Western Suburbs.

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