Portsmouth News

‘We’re in the clear but football is not immune to Covid’

Catlin – We seem to be coronaviru­s-free as things stand

- By NEIL ALLEN Chief sports wr iter neil.allen@thenews.co.uk

MARK CATLIN has declared a clean bill of health at Pompey.

Yet the Blues’ chief executive is realistic enough to accept football is not immune from coronaviru­s.

As it stands, all of Pompey’s players are now back in training following the outbreak which saw five of them become infected with the virus.

The squad will also this week undergo mandatory testing, which had long been scheduled by the Football League.

In addition, the club’s Copnor Road training base was forensical­ly cleaned during the recent lay-off.

But Catlin concedes the coronaviru­s threat can never be confidentl­y combated.

He told The News: ‘As I speak to you now, we seem to be Covid-free.

‘We do have a round of mandatory testing this week that has to be undertaken, so I don’t want to really comment on things that I have no control over.

‘But at this moment in time, to my knowledge, we are Covidfree.

‘I have said from the start that football clubs are not immune from coronaviru­s.

‘We have put players in our bubble, but the reality is they go home and many of them have kids that go to school. How can we protect our players from that?

‘The government say it’s safe for children, which I have no doubt. However, it’s the transition – getting into an environmen­t where it spreads. The kids come home and then it gets passed onto the parents.

‘Football is a contact sport. You can put in all the protection­s in the world, but you only have to look at corners, setpieces and goal celebratio­ns to see the close contact between players.

‘It’s just one of those things, especially given how prevalent this now appears to be in general society.

‘There is a round of testing this week for all clubs – and it will be interestin­g to see how the figures within football replicate those outside.’

Pompey’s coronaviru­s outbreak lost them two scheduled fixtures during the festive period.

The other cancellati­on was due to Accrington Stanley’s frozen pitch putting paid to Saturday’s scheduled contest.

But the Blues haven’t been the only ones affected by the pandemic – even Manchester City saw their clash at Everton postponed.

Catlin added: ‘The training ground is clean, we go through all the EFL protocols.

‘We don’t have any firm proof that it was passed at the training ground or a match environmen­t. Players catch it individual­ly, like the rest of society.

‘If you look at a club like Manchester City, as an example, with all the resources at their disposal, they still had an outbreak within the squad.

‘You can put in all the protocols in the world, but ultimately it is a contact sport.’

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Jack Whatmough tested positive before Christmas
COVID CASE Jack Whatmough tested positive before Christmas

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