The Guardian (USA)

Arsenal in lockdown after Mikel Arteta tests positive for coronaviru­s

- Nick Ames

Arsenal have gone into lockdown after

Mikel Arteta was diagnosed with coronaviru­s late on Thursday night, closing their London Colney and Hale End training centres and entering into emergency discussion­s with the football authoritie­s about the fulfilment of their forthcomin­g fixtures. Saturday’s match at Brighton has been postponed and it appears certain that, as a bare minimum, their FA Cup quarter-final at Sheffield United the following weekend will follow.

Arteta had been tested after feeling ill and the result came up positive at

around 9pm on Thursday, leading the club to take instant action. The entire first-team squad and coaching staff will now self-isolate for 14 days from the moment they last had close contact with Arteta, effectivel­y meaning they will not be able to train until the final few days of March. Other personnel who have spent time around the head coach will be required to follow suit and the Guardian understand­s the number who have to self-isolate may reach as high as 100.

Arteta is understood to be feeling optimistic and there are no concerns about his recovery. His primary frustratio­n is the time spent off work but the situation is certain to have enormous implicatio­ns for a domestic season that has so far barrelled on while others in Europe shut down or are contested behind closed doors. Earlier on Thursday evening the Premier League announced that the weekend’s fixtures would, following the most recent government advice, proceed as planned but that state of affairs now seems untenable.

“This is really disappoint­ing but I took the test after feeling poorly,” Arteta said in a statement released by the club.

“I will be at work as soon as I am allowed.”

The club’s managing director, Vinai Venkatesha­m, said: “The health of our people and the wider public is our priority and that is where our focus is. Our thoughts are with Mikel, who is disappoint­ed but in good spirits. We are in active dialogue with all the relevant people to manage this situation appropriat­ely, and we look forward to getting back to training and playing as soon as medical advice allows.”

Figures close to the situation point out that, after a fortnight’s self-isolation, Arsenal’s players can hardly be expected to come straight back and play. Their match-fitness will have been considerab­ly eroded and it seems likely that, in the increasing­ly unthinkabl­e event the footballin­g world continued around them, they would not be ready to play for the best part of a month. That would add Premier League meetings with Norwich and, perhaps, Wolves to the list of postponed games.

In the meantime Arsenal will test any further players or members of staff who display possibly symptoms of coronaviru­s. The club would not comment on whether that has been necessary so far, beyond the case of Arteta.

Arsenal’s training facilities will undergo a deep clean while closed. Hale End is the home of their academy setup and Arteta has not been there of late, but several members of its staff have been working between venues and are considered to have been in close contact. Other club headquarte­rs, like their north London administra­tive office, Highbury House, are unaffected.

Clubs are unable to unilateral­ly postpone fixtures without consequenc­e, but Arsenal are in contact with the Premier League and Football Associatio­n, with an agreement to cease playing a formality now that their footballin­g setup has effectivel­y been decimated by covid-19.

 ??  ?? Mikel Arteta takes a training session at Arsenal’s Colney centre, which is now closed after the head coach tested positive for Covid-19. Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC via Getty Images
Mikel Arteta takes a training session at Arsenal’s Colney centre, which is now closed after the head coach tested positive for Covid-19. Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC via Getty Images

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