The Guardian (USA)

Football League clubs call on PFA to pay £5m for weekly Covid tests

- Exclusive byPaul MacInnes and Sean Ingle

A number of Football League clubs are urging the players’ union to stump up the £5m needed to fund weekly Covid-19 testing for the rest of the season, the Guardian can reveal. Their call comes amid growing concerns for player welfare and a surge in cases.

Elite sport has been allowed to continue under the government’s new lockdown regulation­s, but matches have been postponed across all four divisions since the Christmas period. On Tuesday the Premier League announced it had recorded a record 40 positive Covid-19 results.

The EFL has this week undertaken its first round of mandatory testing since the start of the season and will introduce twice-weekly tests until the end of the campaign if funding can be agreed. It follows a Christmas period in which more than 40 matches were suspended because of Covid-19 outbreaks. But the Premier League, EFL and the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport are confident the season remains on course.

The EFL abandoned mandatory testing last summer because of its cost and has stuck to a series of protocols designed to reduce the risk of infection. Although clubs believe these protocols should allow the season to be completed, even if it has to be extended, more testing would be welcomed and a number of clubs believe the Profession­al Footballer­s’ Associatio­n should foot the bill.

“Currently we’re not planning for a weekly testing regime and quite frankly we couldn’t afford it,” the Cambridge United CEO, Ian Mather, said. “I think there needs to be another stream of funding [for testing]. I think the obvious funding source is the PFA. If you do a back-of-the-envelope calculatio­n it might cost £5m to do testing every week to the end of the season in the EFL. That’s about 10% of the PFA’s reserves. I think they’re the obvious group to fund it. They’ve got the resources to do it, it’s a player welfare issue.”

Phil Wallace, the chairman of League Two Stevenage, said he could not understand why the PFA had not paid for extra testing. “If they are all about the welfare of their members then surely they should be involved in anything to do with testing,” he said. “Logic would tell you that the more you test, the quicker you find the cases and the quicker you isolate players.”

The director of football at League One Peterborou­gh, Barry Fry, also called for more testing. “The PFA has got more than £55m in the bank, so why can’t they give some of that for the testing of their members?” he said.

The PFA has made a financial contributi­on towards the latest round of testing in the EFL and since October has provided funding to the EFL to support clubs in applying Covid protocols. The PFA has been approached for comment.

The Premier League moved to twice-weekly testing of players and staff after Christmas, and published the first set of results on Tuesday. Between 28 December and 31 December, 1,311 tests produced 28 new positive results.

Between 1 January and 3 January, a further 984 tests were conducted, producing 12 positives.

That is a weekly record since the league began testing, and has resulted in a warning to clubs to pay stricter attention to Covid protocols. Clubs have been asked to tighten up their safety protocols on training and travel to and from match days, as well as around accommodat­ion and the games themselves.

Speaking before Manchester City’s Carabao Cup semi-final at Manchester United, Pep Guardiola said of profession­al football: “It looks like we are an island inside society. Everything is locked down except ourselves.” City’s manager added: “Don’t change the schedule, don’t change the calendar, don’t change the rules, we have to adapt.”

Representa­tives from the Premier League, EFL and National League met the sports minister, Oliver Dowden, on Monday to discuss the recent spate of coronaviru­s cases and the financial impact on the game. However, sources said it was a routine meeting and there are no plans to suspend elite sport.

Another front in the struggle against the virus is the FA Cup third round, which starts on Friday. Nonleague Marine have been given an exemption from government rules banning non-elite sport before their tie with Tottenham. The FA has warned teams they may forfeit their ties if they do not have 14 players available.

 ?? Photograph: Tom Dulat/Getty Images ?? Peterborou­gh, whose midfielder Ryan Broom (right) is in action here against AFC Wimbledon, are among the teams who want the PFA to fund Covid tests.
Photograph: Tom Dulat/Getty Images Peterborou­gh, whose midfielder Ryan Broom (right) is in action here against AFC Wimbledon, are among the teams who want the PFA to fund Covid tests.

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