The Scotsman

Football and rugby in anxious wait for Covid update on crowds

- By ANDREW SMITH

Scotland’s rugby and football authoritie­s will today find out whether they will be able to have full crowds in stadia after 17 January.

First minister Nicola Sturgeon is set to announce to the Scottish Parliament whether the 500-person limit on outdoor events will be removed.

The cinch Premiershi­p is due to resume on Monday, 17 January when Celtic host Hibs, while Hibs v Hearts and Dundee v Dundee United are scheduled for Tuesday, 1 February, and Celtic and Rangers are due to meet 24 hours later.

The SPFL and SFA are desperatel­y hoping more spectators than currently permitted are allowed to attend.

The Six Nations begins on 5 February, when Scotland host England at BT Murrayfiel­d, with the SRU expecting 67,000 people to attend.

However, a cautionary tone was struck by national clinical director Jason Leitch yesterday, reiteratin­g a peak of Omicron coronaviru­s infections is expected between mid-to-late January.

He went on to state it was right to continue to protect the public with the measures in place when case rates remained at their current levels, dashing some hope that the Scottish government will set these aside for both attendees at outdoor and indoor venues, which has led to the closure of nightclubs and concert venues, as well as resulting in only 500 supporters being allowed to attend games at lower league games in the past fortnight.

Leitch’s approach follows health minister Humza Yousaf stating last week that the next fortnight for the NHS would be the “most challengin­g” it had faced in its 73-year history.

Leitch spoke of the “fundamenta­l question” relating to restrictio­ns as “should we still be protecting the public from these case rates if they're just going to go anyway?” He said: “I think yes is the answer to that. I think the protection­s reduce the size of the wave and potentiall­y also elongate the wave to allow you to get more people vaccinated, allow you to spread the hospitalis­ations and intensive care cases out over a longer period. That’s got to be good.

“Now that’s not always good

if you own a pub or if you own a nursery and people are having to self-isolate.

"It's a real balance in there between the number of cases and the number of people off work.

"We've tried to make some adjustment­s in our advice to allow people to do that. But I still think it is the right thing to do to try and reduce that case rate, even if it's not as severe a disease. Because if you have 2,000 cases per 100,000 over a seven-day period, there is no way, up until this point after a year of vaccinatio­n, we'd have been allowing what we're allowing around the country."

Frustratio­ns within Scottish football have been intensifie­d because of the absence of any crowd limits in the English game, with few restrictio­ns down south overall. That has led to comments by Welsh First Minister Mark Drakeford, whose country has similar restrictio­ns to Scotland.

He said: “The outlier here is not Wales. Wales is taking action. As is Scotland. As is Northern Ireland. And as are countries right across Europe and right across the globe.”

Leitch made similar points about the contract north and south of the border. "It isn't [a case of] no restrictio­ns in England. The restrictio­ns in England are face coverings, work from home when you can, there's distancing – there are all kinds of human behaviour changes across every country in the world.

"Let's go to the Netherland­s instead of England and find a much more restricted country than in Scotland, a much more severe version of these restrictio­ns.

"Every country is finding a balance between their moment in the pandemic, their science and what they think predicted next steps are.

"The government tomorrow will look at the data from Friday – the big evidence paper that was published by Public Health Scotland on the state of the pandemic, looking at the number of people vaccinated, the difference vaccinatio­n is making to cases, to hospitalis­ations and to deaths. Very significan­t difference­s but still a very high case rate."

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