Malta Independent

FIFA wants to let teams use 5 substitute­s during backlog

- Graham Dunbar AP Sports Writer

With soccer facing a congested programme of games caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic, FIFA wants to let teams use five substitute­s.

FIFA detailed a temporary plan yesterday to help prevent more injuries due to "potential player overload" as soccer competitio­ns catch up with a backlog.

The proposal gives competitio­n organizers the option of letting teams use five substitute­s instead of three in 90 minutes, and a sixth in knockout games that go to extra time.

"One concern in this regard is that the higher-than-normal frequency of matches may increase the risk of potential injuries due to a resulting player overload," FIFA said in a statement.

Clubs such as Manchester City face an intense program in three competitio­ns if games can safely restart in the coming weeks.

City could have 19 more games – 10 in the Premier League, up to six in the Champions League and up to three in the FA Cup – being scheduled in as few as 10 weeks through August.

Juventus could need 20 more: 12 in Serie A, up to six in the Champions League, and two Coppa Italia games.

The proposal must be signed off by soccer's rule-making panel, known as IFAB. Teams would still be limited to three stoppages of play to make the changes.

IFAB approval should be a formality on a panel which includes officials from FIFA and the four British national federation­s.

FIFA suggested retaining the five-substitute rule next season, which looks likely to start later and be condensed into less time.

It would also apply to all national-team games through December 2021.

World Cup qualifying programs are already behind schedule in Asia and South America, and are on track to face problems in Europe next year.

After UEFA postponed the 2020 European Championsh­ip by one year, that tournament is now set to take fixture dates in June from the 2022 World Cup qualifying groups.

One solution would be national teams playing three competitiv­e games instead of two during the 10-day periods when clubs are mandated to release players for internatio­nal duty.

The substitute­s proposal was announced in anticipati­on of soccer resuming though it is unclear when that will happen. Games will be played in stadiums without fans for at least several weeks and likely longer.

"FIFA's main principle is that health comes first and that no match or competitio­n is worth risking a single human life." soccer's world body said.

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