The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Sport welcomes vaccine passports idea as ticket to great summer of action

Government revives plan to help boost crowds for big events Lancashire hope to have Old Trafford full by T20 Blast in July

- Exclusive By Tom Morgan SPORTS NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

Vaccine passports for stadiums have been revived by the Government as part of a three-pronged strategy to ramp up crowd numbers for the great summer of sport.

Lancashire Cricket Club and at least one Premier League team have already expressed interest in April pilots, in which the innovation­s will be road-tested.

As well as digital Covid-19 record checks for spectators, ministers are keen to explore 30-minute lateral flow tests outside venues as well as home testing kits.

Liverpool University research is also understood to be feeding into ministers’ “scientific Events Research Programme” ahead of rules being relaxed. The hope is that sports will use the scheduled May 17 return of 10,000 fans as just a stepping stone towards rapidly increasing numbers beyond June 21.

Last night sport welcomed the Government’s decision to revisit vaccine passports, having previously opposed the technology due to the potential impact on civil liberties. Ministers’ roadmap details how experts will now consider “Covid status certificat­ion … using testing or vaccinatio­n data to confirm in different settings that people have a lower risk of transmitti­ng Covid-19 to others”.

Daniel Gidney, Lancashire’s chief executive, said ministers were right to be reconsider­ing the technology.

“However difficult that is, in terms of return of crowds, it should be considered part of the talk,” he added. “It’s not a silver bullet, but it’s something that should be considered.”

Involvemen­t of England’s top tier in the pilots could also help ease concerns over the sporting integrity of giving one-off home advantage on the final day of the season. Premier League clubs will vote on whether to have fans back on May 23, because the competitio­n is keen to ensure away teams do not feel they are at an unfair disadvanta­ge. One option would be for government to offer the likes of relegation­threatened Newcastle, due to play away at fellow strugglers Fulham, a chance to have home fans in April as part of the pilots.

The roadmap announced on Monday allows for the prospect of crowd numbers being scaled up dramatical­ly beyond 10,000 by the time England play Czech Republic in their final Euro 2020 group match on June 22.

Whitehall sources and public health experts played down the likelihood of 90,000 being inside Wembley by then, but Lancashire announced they were hoping to have a full Old Trafford for the T20 Blast against Worcesters­hire on July 1.

Gidney said cricket’s older demographi­c placed the sport in pole position for getting full stadiums. “It’s a perfect audience because a lot of them will have been vaccinated,” he added. “We also have the space because we have 17 acres to do a lot of lateral flow volume testing, and that is high on the Government’s agenda and we are very keen to support that.”

Gidney announced the club had suffered an £18 million drop in turnover during the past year. “I want to be able to get members back watching County Championsh­ip matches in April – not in huge numbers, but we need to get those pilots away,” Gidney said. “The more pilots we have, the more data we have.”

The Whitehall blueprint adds that “over the spring the Government will run a scientific Events Research Programme. This will include a series of pilots using enhanced testing approaches and other measures to run events with larger crowd sizes and reduced social distancing to evaluate the outcomes. The pilots will start in April”.

Wimbledon, the Open, Silverston­e and Royal Ascot are now planning to welcome crowds after the Prime Minister announced that, from May 17, gates can finally open.

In the coming days, Wembley chiefs will also push for 10,000 fans at the FA Cup final, which falls two days earlier, and potentiall­y up to 24,000 for England v Scotland at the Euros. The fourth and final step of the Government recovery plan aims for the lifting of all restrictio­ns on sports and entertainm­ent events from June 21 at the earliest, “using enhanced testing approaches and other measures” which are to be trialled at pilot events starting from April.

The hope is sports will use the scheduled May 17 return of 10,000 fans as just a stepping stone

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