Bangkok Post

Bundesliga players in isolation ahead of resumption

-

BERLIN: German teams started the week in isolation yesterday after going into seven-day quarantine ahead of the Bundesliga season restart on Saturday, with club bosses saying completing the campaign amid the coronaviru­s outbreak will not be easy.

The German Football League (DFL) decided last week to resume the first and second division from May 16 after a two-month suspension, making it the first major sports league to attempt a restart.

Teams have been sent into mandatory isolation after testing for the virus in order to reduce the risk of infection before playing in empty stadiums with only a handful of staff and officials, to help prevent the spread of the virus.

Several clubs, including champions Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund and Wolfsburg, have picked hotels in their cities to cut travel times to training locations and airports for the weekend matches.

Others like Schalke, who face Dortmund in the Ruhr valley derby on Saturday, and Borussia Moenchengl­adbach are using hotels at their stadiums.

Bayer Leverkusen and Union Berlin, who host Bayern Munich on Sunday, have moved to more isolated hotels in the countrysid­e, as have bottom club Paderborn who will spend the week in a nearby thermal springs town.

Players and staff wore face masks as they departed for hotels where distance between tables at team lunches and dinners will become routine, as will single rooms where players will make their own beds to reduce unnecessar­y contact with other people.

Plans to restart, however, suffered a setback on Saturday after the entire team of second tier Dynamo Dresden was placed in two-week quarantine following two positive coronaviru­s tests.

“We always expected that the remainder of this season will not be trouble-free,” Borussia Dortmund chief executive Hans-Joachim Watzke said.

“These tests and results are also a sign of our transparen­cy.”

The league, desperate to complete the season by June 30, has drawn up a detailed set of regulation­s for training and matches, including stringent testing that helped it get the government’s green light to restart.

But with the virus far from gone in Germany where about 170,000 people have been infected and over 7,400 have died, the DFL is concerned any positive coronaviru­s cases could seriously damage chances of finishing the season, and inflict potentiall­y “existence-threatenin­g” financial damage to some clubs.

“I expect everyone now to live up to their responsibi­lities,” DFL CEO Christian Seifert said at the weekend.

 ?? AFP ?? Schalke players attend a training session as the Bundesliga restart looms on Saturday.
AFP Schalke players attend a training session as the Bundesliga restart looms on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand