The Freeman

In sports, coronaviru­s shows no respect for stars or youth

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High-level sports was one of the first social activities shut down by the coronaviru­s pandemic and many athletes, who play in front of crowds and train with teammates, have been among the high-profile victims.

While only one sports personalit­y, the 76-year-old former Real Madrid president, Lorenzo Sanz, has so far died, those infected spread across the age range and the sporting spectrum, with clusters in Italian football, the NBA and cycling.

The numbers could be higher because not all clubs are testing.

Valladolid in the Spanish Liga rejected test kits saying they should be used on those who need them.

The NBA’s Golden State Warriors said they would only test players with symptoms.

“We’re treating ourselves like people, which is what we are,” said general manager Bob Myers. “We’re just a basketball team.”

Here, AFP Sport looks at some of the most high-profile cases.

•Sanz, who died on March 21, was in charge of

Real Madrid from 1995-2000, overseeing two Champions League titles.

“My father has just passed away. He did not deserve this ending and in this way,” tweeted his son, Lorenzo Sanz junior.

•Former NBA season MVP, Kevin Durant, a 31-year-old forward former NBA most valuable player,is one of four Brooklyn Nets players to have tested positive. The forward had been sitting out the season recovering from an Achilles injury.

•Utah Jazz star Rudy Gobert tested positive for the virus. The Frenchman had to apologise after pointedly touching every microphone and voice recorder on a table in front of him at a media conference, only to then test positive for COVID-19.

•On March 17, while the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and local organisers were still insisting the Tokyo Games would go ahead as scheduled this summer, Japan Olympic Committee deputy chief Kozo Tashima said he had contracted coronaviru­s.

“I have a mild fever. Examinatio­ns showed a symptom of pneumonia, but I’m fine,” the 62-year-old Tashima said in a statement, issued via the Japan Football Associatio­n, which he also heads.

•Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta tested positive for COVID-19. The English Premier League was suspended the day after the Gunners announced Arteta had tested positive.

As a result of the Spaniard’s diagnosis, the Arsenal squad were sent into self-isolation for 14 days.

•Callum Hudson-Odoi, the 19-year-old Chelsea and England winger on March 13 became the first Premier League player to test positive.

The club said at the time that the teenager was “doing well.”

•Among other young, rising, stars to catch the virus is 20-year-old Brazilian tennis player Thiago Seyboth Wild who announced on Wednesday that he had tested positive.

He said he started feeling ill “about 10 days ago.”

That came after a globetrott­ing period typical of the tennis circuit.

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