Arab News

Former Liga winger dons white coat to take on coronaviru­s

- AFP Madrid

Journeyman footballer Toni Dovale put his football boots to one side and slipped into a pharmacist’s white coat in the front line struggle against the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) in Spain.

The 29-year-old pharmacy graduate and former top-level sportsman had been playing football for a Thai club, but was visiting his family in Spain when the COVID-19 pandemic took hold. So he decided to pitch in his “grain of sand” against the virus using the studies which he had yet to put into practice due to his passion for football.

“I really was packing my bags to go back when things got complicate­d,” said Dovale .

Travel restrictio­ns trapped Dovale in his native La Coruna in the Atlantic coast region of Galicia, where he started his football career with nearby Celta Vigo. Although Dovale also completed his university studies in pharmacy four years ago, he had never actually worked in the field.

Now with the world of sport in limbo the footballer realized the time was ripe to use his studies to help his homeland.

“I was playing in Asia then; pharmacy is different there and I was never in Spain long enough to work,” he says,

“With football stopped and travel banned I said to myself ‘get some practical experience and do your bit’.”

COVID-19 is ravaging Spain with a death toll of over 4,800 and some 64,000 registered cases of infection.

There is hope of course with around 10,000 people already cured of the virus in Spains for multimedia clients

“We’re in a really frightenin­g situation. Those of us working with the public are afraid, and the people who come to us for advice are afraid too,” says Dovale, who is working in a pharmacy run by his family. He has gloves but no mask, and does not appear ready to lose his smile any time soon.

“We all know we are exposed, that this is a pandemic and a complicate­d situation,” he says.

“But we all know too that our behavior in complicate­d situations defines who we are, and for me I need to put fears for my own safety to one side and help in any way that I can.

“There are shortages of many things and we are struggling to get enough of the simple things like thermomete­rs, paracetamo­l, gloves and hand gels.”

Dovale has played football for Spanish top flight clubs Leganes and Rayo Vallecano, Sporting Kansas City in the United States and also Bengaluru in the Indian Super League before moving to Thailand.

“Right now I’m the same as everyone else in that I train at home jumping over the furniture,” he jokes.

“I start at 7 a.m. and I use whatever I can including bottles of water and stuff like that. Then I go downstairs to the pharmacy.

“I hope this is over as soon as possible and that I can go back to playing football again.”

 ?? Footballer
AFP ?? We’re in a really frightenin­g situation. Those of us working with the public are afraid, and the people who come to us for advice are afraid too.
Toni Dovale
Football globetrott­er
Toni Dovale has changed his cleats and the ball for the white coat in a pharmacy to contribute his bit in the fight against the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.
Footballer AFP We’re in a really frightenin­g situation. Those of us working with the public are afraid, and the people who come to us for advice are afraid too. Toni Dovale Football globetrott­er Toni Dovale has changed his cleats and the ball for the white coat in a pharmacy to contribute his bit in the fight against the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

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