Bangkok Post

Eight Euro hosts confirm to have fans at matches

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Eight of the 12 host cities for this year’s delayed European Championsh­ip have said they will allow spectators at matches based on projection­s of an improving Covid-19 situation, Uefa said on Friday, but the remaining four risk being dropped as hosts altogether.

Munich, Rome, Bilbao and Dublin have all been given until April 19 to release their plans to let fans in, with European football’s governing body saying “final decisions will be made on that date regarding the staging of matches in those four venues”.

Uefa’s executive committee will meet then and there is the possibilit­y that it could strip hosting rights from those four cities and give their matches to other existing host venues.

Earlier this week the Football Associatio­n of Ireland admitted it was “not in a position at this point to provide assurances on minimum spectator levels” in Dublin, but the country is preparing to take tentative steps towards lifting its current lockdown which has been in place since December.

Bilbao is understood to be hoping to allow 13,000 fans inside the 53,000-capacity San Mames, but that is based on strict conditions laid out by authoritie­s which the Spanish Football Federation said will make it “impossible” to admit spectators.

The city of Munich indicated on Tuesday that it could only let fans inside the Allianz Arena if the health situation at the time allows, but the Italian government has given the green light for supporters to attend in Rome.

Last month Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin made it clear he did not want any matches played “in front of empty stands” at the Euro, which will be played from June 11 to July 11 after being postponed by a year due to the pandemic.

The number of spectators allowed in stadiums neverthele­ss looks set to vary considerab­ly, with Saint-Petersburg and Baku confirming they will allow crowds at 50 percent of capacity and Hungarian capital Budapest aiming to allow 100 percent capacity “but with strict stadium entry requiremen­ts for spectators.”

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said on Friday that by the beginning of the Euro all those who registered for vaccinatio­n in Hungary would have received it and would therefore be eligible to attend.

“Everyone who is registered will definitely have been vaccinated, and with their vaccinatio­n card will have the opportunit­y to take part in this event,” he said.

Uefa said Amsterdam, Bucharest, Copenhagen and Glasgow will allow between a quarter and a third of full capacity, while London “has confirmed a minimum capacity of 25 percent for the first three group matches and round of 16 match”.

That leaves open the possibilit­y that more fans will be able to attend the remaining matches at Wembley Stadium, which will stage both the semi-finals and the final.

Supporters with tickets hoping to travel to Budapest will not have to quarantine on arrival, Uefa said, but will need to present two negative Covid-19 test results.

In Azerbaijan, fans with tickets in Baku will be allowed to attend and will not need to quarantine as long as they are citizens or residents of Turkey, Switzerlan­d or the United Kingdom as well as the countries who reach the quarter-finals.

Bucharest will also let ticket holders in with a negative test and a guarantee to stay less than three days.

 ??  ?? UNCERTAINT­Y PREVAILS: San Mames stadium in Bilbao could allow 13,000 fans inside the 53,000-seat venue for their Euro matches.
UNCERTAINT­Y PREVAILS: San Mames stadium in Bilbao could allow 13,000 fans inside the 53,000-seat venue for their Euro matches.

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