The Citizen (Gauteng)

Plans to ride out the storm

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London – The Premier League is adamant that it can overcome huge logistical challenges to get players back on the pitch during the coronaviru­s crisis but has long since accepted there will be no fans in stadiums.

English Football Associatio­n chairman Greg Clarke became the latest senior figure to admit this week that social-distancing guidelines make it impossible for supporters to congregate in stadiums “any time soon”.

The drive behind the Premier League’s “Project Restart” is the attempt to avoid having to pay back millions in TV revenue. Clubs could reportedly miss out on £762 million for failing to complete this season alone.

According to Uefa’s latest European Club Footballin­g Landscape report, just 13% of the Premier League’s revenue comes from gate receipts.

England’s top-tier has the luxury many other leagues cannot afford, trying to ride out the economic storm without paying fans.

“We might not like it, it might not be the perfect solution, but it is the only solution that we’ve got to move forward,” David Webber, a senior lecturer in football studies at Solent University, said.

However, the billions in television revenues the Premier League has been able to tap into is not only thanks to the quality of the players on the field but the atmosphere provided by thousands of passionate fans.

“The whole economic model only works when the grounds are pretty full,” said Richard Scudamore, who oversaw the Premier League’s growth into a commercial giant from 1999 to 2018.

“No actor likes playing in front of an empty hall,” he told the Telegraph.

The last time a ball was kicked in the Premier League was on 9 March and will not return until June at the earliest.

Liverpool’s title coronation is on hold for now, with league bosses hoping there will be an insatiable demand for their product. –

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