Daily Mail

CORONAVIRU­S LATEST

- MATT HUGHES Chief Sports Reporter

THE FA and Premier league are exploring the costs and implicatio­ns of staging games behind closed doors later this season to cope with any mass spread of the coronaviru­s.

Both organisati­ons will be led by the government’s public health advice before making any alteration­s to the fixture list, but have held talks about what to do if large gatherings are prohibited — with behind-closed-doors games emerging as a possibilit­y.

The FA have the added complicati­on of hosting a friendly internatio­nal at Wembley on March 27 between England and Italy, where six Serie A matches were postponed last weekend due to the spread of the virus. The fixture will remain on unless the FA are advised to act by the government.

Cancellati­ons would result in multi-million-pound losses, so the talks have focused on how games could be staged without fans, which would also be the preferred option of broadcaste­rs.

during the discussion­s, the FA have raised the need to offer solidarity payments to lower- division clubs in the event of games being held behind closed doors, because those sides rely on gate revenue far more than their Premier league counterpar­ts.

UEFA discussed the coronaviru­s only briefly at yesterday’s Executive Committee meeting in Amsterdam, despite the threat it poses to this summer’s European Championsh­ip and the rest of the club season.

The opening game of Euro 2020 between Italy and Turkey is due to take place in rome on June 12, but UEFA will not be rushed into a decision. They will act on the advice of government­s.

The issue was raised by president Aleksander Ceferin, but a source said the discussion lasted only two minutes.

A UEFA spokesman said: ‘We’re in touch with the authoritie­s, we’re in the hands of the local authoritie­s, and we’ll deal with whatever they tell us.

‘There’s no threat to any more matches that I’ve been made aware of, other than the ones that have already been changed.’

It also emerged last night that the republic of Ireland’s Euro 2020 play-off against Slovakia on March 26 could be played behind closed doors because of the spiralling issue of coronaviru­s.

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