BusinessMirror

English soccer returns and takes a knee

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MANCHESTER, England—players kneeled in support of the Black Lives Matter movement and victims of the coronaviru­s were remembered as the Premier League made a somber return on Wednesday from a 100-day shutdown that deprived England of its national sport.

Back on the sideline at Manchester City was Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta, whose positive Covid-19 test in March led to the longest suspension of the top-flight competitio­n since World War II. Fans are still prohibited from attending stadiums.

Britain is still trying to contain one of the world’s worst outbreaks of the coronaviru­s while also convulsed by a reckoning over racial injustice that roused the campaignin­g passion and anger of Premier League players following the death of George Floyd.

“I’m embarrasse­d, I am ashamed for what white people have done to black people,” Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola said. “We have to do a lot of things for black people we have not done so far.”

The message “Black Lives Matter” replaced player names on jerseys during City’s 3-0 victory over Arsenal and Aston Villa’s 0-0 draw with Sheffield United. The symbolic move that will continue in this weekend’s round of games is being accompanie­d by demands from players for substantiv­e changes to end discrimina­tion and promote diversity.

After the opening whistle blew in the first game at Villa Park, every player took a knee in a tribute to Floyd, who was killed by a policeman in Minneapoli­s last month. In Manchester, the same gesture took place just before kickoff.

“We’d seen the other teams do it in the earlier kickoff and we thought we have to do it as well,” said Manchester City forward Raheem Sterling, who is at the forefront of the campaign against racism in soccer and wider society.

“Little by little, we are seeing change and that’s what everyone is hoping for, not just black players but the majority of the country.”

The power of footballer­s to use their platform to bring about political change was shown this week when Manchester United forward Marcus Rashford forced the government to reverse its decision to halt school lunch vouchers for poor students over the summer holidays.

The government was keen to see Rashford, Sterling and the rest of the Premier League stars back in action as the lockdown is eased. But games cannot be watched in pubs nor in stadiums because of ongoing concerns about gatherings spreading the coronaviru­s.

“There’s no doubt that this is a hugely symbolic moment,” Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden said about the restart at the government’s daily briefing an hour before the games, “an important step forward in our careful journey back towards normality.”

The resumption of the Premier League comes as Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve government faces criticism for not ordering a nationwide lockdown until March 23 and for easing restrictio­ns in England too soon given still-high levels of new cases and deaths.

During the lockdown and with the resumption of the season in doubt, the league had feared it could lose more than $1 billion for failing to meet broadcasti­ng commitment­s.

Of the five biggest soccer leagues in Europe, England is the fourth to get back on the field. Germany was first last month, while Spain and Italy resumed this month. France canceled the remainder of its season while the virus was still peaking—as did England’s neighbor, Scotland.

The Premier League plans to finish the remaining 92 games of its season by July 26 and the FA Cup final is now due to be staged a week later on August 1.

The Champions League plans to complete the competitio­n in an abbreviate­d final eight tournament in Lisbon, with the final on August 23.

 ?? AP ?? MANCHESTER City’s Kevin De Bruyne (center), Arsenal’s Pierre-emerick Aubameyang (right) and even the referee takes a knee in support of the Black Lives Matter movement.
AP MANCHESTER City’s Kevin De Bruyne (center), Arsenal’s Pierre-emerick Aubameyang (right) and even the referee takes a knee in support of the Black Lives Matter movement.

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