The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Green light for grass roots

HFA and RFU ready to submit their plans to allow safe restart hmillions poised to return to competitiv­e training and games

- Bytom Morgan SPORTS NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

The Government has given the go-ahead for the resumption of all competitiv­e grass-roots team sports alongside club cricket from tomorrow as part of a new lockdown-easing plan. The changes will also allow for small groups of spectators. The Daily Telegraph spearheade­d the campaign for the return of club cricket.

All competitiv­e grass-roots team sports can begin returning alongside club cricket from tomorrow, the Government has announced under a new lockdown easing plan which will also allow for small groups of spectators.

The most significan­t loosening of sporting rules since Covid-19 means the likes of the Football Associatio­n and Rugby Football Union can set out their timetables for allowing the return of amateur-level competitio­n. Some five-a-side football may be back within the next week, pending Government approval.

Club cricket remains the first team sport to fully return tomorrow, following a campaign spearheade­d by The Daily Telegraph.

The England and Wales Cricket Board gave the sport an official green light to return last night, and the Government signalled that other sports can now follow.

Supporters will also be allowed to attend community fixtures “in small numbers provided they are in groups of two households only, or no larger than six people from different households, and adhere to social-distancing measures,” the Government announced.

The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, which agreed the new guidance with Public Health England, the Department for Health and Sport England, said individual sports would now submit “an action plan and related guidance, demonstrat­ing its mitigation­s, how it plans to operate, and any adaptation­s required, before they can be approved to restart”.

Measures in the new guidance are said to ensure clubs support track and trace efforts by collecting informatio­n on participan­ts at both training and matches. All players, officials, volunteers and spectators must undergo a self-assessment for Covid-19 symptoms, and participan­ts and spectators must minimise the use of public transport and car-sharing with anyone outside their household.

Other instructio­ns include: Clubs limiting time spent congregati­ng at a venue before a match begins, and “where possible” arrive changed and ready to warm up.

All sports must also adhere to social distancing throughout warm-ups and breaks in play, and avoid sharing equipment where possible. Like guidance in elite football, players should also avoid unnecessar­y close contact.

Sports in which a single ball needs to be touched by multiple players, such as basketball, cricket and football, need to include in their action plans how they will reduce the risk of this transmitti­ng the virus – for example by cleaning when the ball goes out of play.

Club lavatories will need to be opened before, during and for 30 minutes after matches, but they must be cleaned regularly.

Clubhouses and bars can be opened in line with government guidance on hospitalit­y, with groups limited to six people.

Sport England chief executive Tim Hollingswo­rth said the announceme­nt was “an important step forward”, while Nigel Huddleston, the sports minister, added: “This is fantastic news for the millions of people who miss playing sport with their friends and teammates.”

Rules on exercise and sport have been gradually relaxed since May 14, when Britons were initially allowed greater access to local, outdoor physical activity.

The FA has been in talks with the Government for weeks about protocols for how grass-roots and recreation­al football could return.

The previous easing of lockdown restrictio­ns allowed people who play contact or team sports to practise in groups of up to six, but the two-metre social-distancing rules meant no physical contact.

The FA hopes that matches will resume this year and have taken encouragem­ent from how other sectors of society have introduced modificati­ons to gradually return to some kind of normality.

The RFU has published its plan for the resumption of rugby in England, including three possible dates for the community game’s return.

It consisted of six stages: from Stage A relating to individual training with one other person, moving through to Stage F when there can be a return to competitiv­e matches against other teams.

Similar to football, the RFU has advised that it is currently at Stage B, meaning that exercise within a group of up to six people is allowed, as long as social-distancing guidelines are maintained.

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