The Chronicle

Changes to be made to testing at top clubs

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THE Premier League and EFL are stepping up their efforts to limit the spread of coronaviru­s as fears grow over a mutant variant of the virus which is believed to be more infectious.

Top-flight players in Tier 4 areas will be tested for Covid-19 twice a week as soon as it is practicall­y possible to do so, the PA news agency has reported.

EFL clubs are reviewing the action they are taking to limit the spread, with the physio of League One club Ipswich, Matt Byard, saying a temporary suspension of play could act as a “circuit breaker” and the club’s manager Paul aul Lambert concerned the system is operating “on a wing and a prayer”. r”.

Players in the top flight have been tested on a weekly basis since the he start of the 2020-21 sea- son, but testing at clubs in Tier 4 areas will now revert to the level used during ‘Project Restart’ in the summer. The increased testing will be widened ed out to clubs in lower-tier -tier areas from next month, h, it is understood.

The Government placed large parts of south-east and eastern England into Tier 4 last weekend over fears a strain of the virus is in circulatio­n which is believed to be more transmissi­ble than previous ones.

The Premier League clubs currently in Tier 4 are Arsenal, Chelsea, Crystal Palace, Fulham, Tottenham and West Ham.

The Premier League had said when it cut testing back to once a week at the start of the new season that it would keep testing levels under review.

The league’s latest figures were

I think we have been tested, I would say since we have been back in July, about six to seven times

Paul Lambert

released on Monday night and showed there were seven positive cases out of 1,569 players and club staff tested.

Ipswich is one of a number of EFL clubs which have been forced to postpone matches due to a coronaviru­s outbreak, and physio Byard has said football “may benefit from a ‘circuit breaker”’.

Positive tests at the Portman Road outfit – including for manager Lambert – led to the postponeme­nt on Monday of their League One match at home to Northampto­n on Boxing Day and the trip to AFC Wimbledon on December 29.

Other EFL clubs currently experienci­ng similar issues include Millwall, Peterborou­gh, Sunderland and Bristol Rovers.

Tractor Boys boss Lambert said: “We are, for me, getting led on a wing and a prayer with it.

“I think we have been tested, I would say since we have been back in July, about six to seven times. In between that, then it’s been mayhem.

“Nobody knows if we are going into games with the virus or not. This is for me where it is wrong.

“If the testing was clear right down the leagues and everybody was getting tested twice a week...

“It should be the same for everybody else because you are putting people’s welfare at risk. I picked it up and it’s not great, definitely not a great thing to catch.”

Asked about the possibilit­y to pause the season now and extend it into June, Lambert said: “Yes, you could, because League One and Two – no disrespect, but they don’t have too many internatio­nal players that need to go into the Euros.

“I don’t think anybody would have any grievance on that. But there’s got to be a safer way, and a fairer way to get through. Whether it’s the testing... at the minute, I know for a fact, and I can only speak because I have had it, it’s not working.”

The EFL said its clubs would be “reviewing and further strengthen­ing their Covid-19 protocols to help minimise the transmissi­on risk” but that this would still cover only mandatory testing where players or staff are showing symptoms.

League-wide testing is conducted at strategic intervals during the season, with the next set scheduled for the week beginning Monday, January 4.

 ??  ?? Ipswich Town boss Paul Lambert has tested positive for Covid-19
Ipswich Town boss Paul Lambert has tested positive for Covid-19

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