The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Quaint start to Bundesliga

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FROM social distancing substitute­s using airport stairs, to disinfecte­d balls and a potential television audience of one billion, the Bundesliga enjoyed a chequered restart as the first major sports league to resume amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

The German top two divisions, suspended since mid-March due to the virus, returned yesterday with Bundesliga’s showcase — the Ruhr valley derby seeing Borussia Dortmund thrashing Schalke four-nil, as football-starved fans around the globe tuned in to watch live action.

Despite the possible global audience of a billion as predicted by Bayern Munich boss Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, and the hope it gave other sports leagues, it was not what fans had been hoping for. Instead of the 81 000 crowd packing in Dortmund’s Signal Iduna Park, it was a mere 300 people, including players, staff, team officials, broadcaste­rs and security personnel, as in every stadium as part of a strict health protocol. Fans have also been banned from inside and around the venues to minimise the risk of infection.

In Dortmund, Europe’s biggest standing tribune, the Yellow Wall stood impressive­ly empty as the latest episode of the fiercest German football rivalry unfolded on the pitch.

The games sounded more like Sunday kickabouts or high-intensity training sessions than the return to action of highly-paid profession­als in the world’s best attended football league with normally an average of about 42 000 spectators per game.

Police were present at the grounds prior to the start in order to deter fans from gathering outside to celebrate.

“The derby without fans is a new challenge for us but equally complex as a regular game,”Dortmund police said before the game, urging fans to stay at home.

“Make it easy for us and stay at home.” — Reuters.

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