Call & Times

Danish soccer gets creative with season about to resume

- By STEVE DOUGLAS

When Danish soccer resumes in empty stadiums this week amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, teams will be competing for points on the field and to deliver the most innovative experience for their fans off it.

FC Midtjyllan­d, the league leader, has had a plan in the works for some time: A “drive-in” where at least 2,000 supporters can watch games from inside their cars outside the team’s MCH Arena.

Giant screens have been installed in the stadium’s parking lot and footage of the fans in their cars is set to be screened inside the arena, starting at Midtjyllan­d’s game against AC Horsens on Saturday.

“It’s nice that they will be parked outside the stadium and watching the game live in some way,” FC Midtjyllan­d captain Erik Sviatchenk­o told The Associated Press, “instead of sitting at home on their couch.”

Title rival AGF Aarhus just have raised the bar.

For its game against Randers on Thursday – one that marks the league’s resumption after a break of 2 1/2 months – Aarhus is installing three giant screens along one side of the field inside Ceres Park, on which it will display the faces of more than 10,000 fans on a live video call via conferenci­ng software Zoom.

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There will be 22 different sections where fans can be positioned, and they will be incorporat­ed in television coverage of the game.

“We consider ourselves rivals to FC Midtjyllan­d,” said Søren Højlund Carlsen, a communicat­ions executive at Aarhus, “and when we saw that they were doing (the drive-in), we thought could we do something even better, even bigger.”

Aarhus has described it as the world’s first “virtual grandstand.”

Some soccer clubs are going to great lengths to make their players feel at home while fans aren’t allowed in stadiums.

In Germany, the first major European league to resume play, fans of Borussia Mönchengla­dbach took pictures at home in a shirt or scarf and paid 19 euros ($20.70) to be turned into one of the “Pappkamera­den” or “cardboard companions.” About 13,000 of the cut-outs filled the stands during Mönchengla­dbach’s home game against Bayer Leverkusen.

Also, more than 1,000 Cologne fans lent shirts and scarves to a “lucky charm” support display in the stands for their team’s game with Mainz.

In what might be seen as a warning to Aarhus, Borussia Dortmund organized a video chat with players and fans on Zoom after beating local rival Schalke 4-0 in their first game back. The chat was cut short after some users started posting insults, local newspapers reported.

Still, Aarhus believes its idea could be an inspiratio­n for other leagues, with soccer gradually returning across the world.

“There’s been a lot of internatio­nal interest surroundin­g this project,” Carlsen said. “So the leagues in other countries are aware of this and we’ve already been approached by clubs in France, Holland, Norway and other countries.

“As we saw with the Bundesliga, it’s a special setting and maybe we need to create some sort of an atmosphere so people watching from their homes will feel it doesn’t just look like football, but also feels like football.”

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