Iran Varzeshi

‪Empty seats and elbow bumps‬ ‪as Bundesliga makes clinical‬ return

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‪balls used in their evening match against Borussia‬ ‪Mönchengla­dbach at half-time.‬ ‪Union Berlin’s coach, Urs Fischer, will miss his‬ ‪team’s game against Bayern Munich on Sunday after‬ breaking quarantine following a family bereavemen­t.‬ Augsburg’s Heiko Herrlich was absent from‬ ‪the touchline as his side lost to Wolfsburg on Saturday,‬ having left the team hotel earlier in the week‬ ‪to buy toiletries. Players were advised to avoid communal‬ showers or even wait to wash off the sweat‬ ‪and dirt in their hotels. Hygiene masks had to be‬ ‪worn in the dressing room, the players’ tunnel and‬ ‪on the subs bench. Hugs and high-fives during goal‬ ‪celebratio­ns had been discourage­d. Most players‬ ‪and coaches opted for a bump of the elbow or lower‬ ‪arm instead. When Dortmund’s prodigious Norwegian‬ striker Erling Braut Haaland scored the day’s‬ ‪first goal in the 29th minute, his team made sure to‬ ‪abide by social distancing to celebrate the opener.‬ ‪n the buildup to the matches, there had been high‬ ‪hopes that the Bundesliga being the first high-profile‬ ‪football league in Europe to restart after the lockdown‬ would create an image boost for a league often‬ overshadow­ed by the Premier League, Spain’s La‬ ‪Liga and Italy’s Serie A. Instead, footage of deserted‬ ‪stands and players’ shouts eerily echoing inside the‬ ‪empty stadiums seemed to mainly draw attention‬ ‪to the absence of the strongly nourished grassroots‬ ‪fan culture that used to set the German league apart‬ ‪from others in Europe.‬

‪The Guardian - Without the Covid-19 pandemic, Saturday‬ 16 May would have seen the final matches of‬ ‪the German football league’s 57th season: a day of‬ ‪passion and noise, tears of joy from the champions‬ ‪and despair from fans of relegated teams. Instead,‬ ‪the restart of the Bundesliga after a nine-week break‬ ‪was a strangely clinical affair, which is more likely to‬ ‪be remembered for unfamiliar hygiene routines, an‬ ‪eerie atmosphere inside the stadiums and awkward‬ ‪elbow bumps.‬ ‪For the restart to go ahead, the 36 clubs in the first‬ ‪and second division had to abide by a strict code of‬ ‪regulation­s drawn up by the German football associatio­n.‬ No more than a total of 300 people were allowed‬ in and directly around the stadiums where the‬ ‪games took place. Clubs were responsibl­e for stopping‬ their fans from gathering outside the arenas’‬ ‪gates, though fears of fans ignoring social distancing‬ to cheer on their teams proved unfounded: at‬ ‪Dortmund’s Signal Iduna Park, famed for its intense‬ ‪atmosphere, the only people passing by the empty‬ ‪stands were joggers. Around the pitch, there were‬ ‪no mascots and no children holding hands with players‬ in the tunnels. Ballboys, reduced to four at each‬ ‪match, wore gloves and had to be tested for the coronaviru­s‬ beforehand. TV reporters wore masks and‬ ‪plastic sheets over their microphone­s. The German‬ ‪FA’s protocols advised clubs to disinfect match balls‬ ‪“before and during the match”, though only Eintracht‬ Frankfurt confirmed they would wipe clean the‬

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