Gulf News

Premier League 2019-20 season restarts behind closed doors on June 17

EPL FINALLY GIVEN GREEN LIGHT TO RESUME WITH GAMES TO BE PLAYED BEHIND CLOSED DOORS

- BY MATTHEW SMITH Sports Editor

The Covid-19-delayed Premier League 201920 season has been given the green light to restart on June 17. The English top flight will resume with Aston Villa v Sheffield United and Manchester City v Arsenal as the early games on June 17.

The Premier League was suspended on March 13 because of the pandemic and it will be 100 days after Leicester City’s 4-0 win over Aston Villa on March 9 that competitio­n will resume, with games now behind closed doors.

On Wednesday, clubs unanimousl­y voted to resume contact training, having started noncontact training last week.

A full fixture list would then be played on the weekend of June 19-21, the reports said, with matches to be played behind closed doors.

All fixtures in March were suspended after Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta and Chelsea winger Callum Hudson-Odoi tested positive for Covid-19.

There are still 92 matches to play and although Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool appear certain to be crowned champions, the relegation and European qualificat­ion still need to be resolved.

Top-flight clubs voted unanimousl­y on Wednesday to return to contact training and were meeting again on Thursday to discuss issues including the restart date and the rebate to broadcaste­rs. It is predicted that clubs face repaying up to £340 million ($419 million) to broadcaste­rs.

Crucial summit

So far, just 12 people have tested positive for coronaviru­s after 2,752 tests across the Premier League.

Germany’s Bundesliga resumed earlier this month and La Liga in Spain hopes to return from June 11, while a crucial summit between Italian football officials and the country’s sports minister was to be held later yesterday. Liverpool are 25 points clear at the top of the table while Bournemout­h, Aston Villa and Norwich City are in the relegation places. The leaders could clinch the title with victory in their first game back should second-placed Manchester City lose to Arsenal.

Difficult moment

Tottenham manager Jose Mourinho spoke this week of his desperatio­n to get playing again after seeing football resume elsewhere. “Honestly, since the moment the Bundesliga started, the Portuguese league and Spanish league announced a date to start, I think it is the most difficult moment for us, because we want to play,” he told Sky Sports.

Some players have voiced fears over their safety and that of their families due to the virus.

Watford captain Troy Deeney has revealed that people have told him they want his baby son to contract coronaviru­s after he chose not to return to training.

Deeney has been absent from training since Watford and other Premier League clubs returned to non-contact sessions last week. “I saw some comments in regards to my son, people saying: ‘I hope your son gets corona’,” Deeney told CNN Sport.

“That’s the hard part for me. If you respond to that, people then go: ‘Ah, we’ve got him’ and they keep doing it.”

Deeney is understood to be due to resume training next week.

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