NOW WILL YOU BELIEVE THIS?
Premier League draft in Prof Van-Tam to dispel vaccine myths for stars still refusing inoculation
PREMIER LEAGUE officials have resorted to making a video with the Government urging players to ignore myths around the Covid vaccine.
Jonathan Van-Tam, the deputy chief medical officer, has agreed to clear up misinformation around the vaccine amid growing concern about footballers refusing to get inoculated.
Professor Van-Tam recorded footage on Friday in which he answered a series of questions put to him by a Premier League representative.
It is due to be shared among players imminently to avoid more of the Covid-enforced setbacks threatening to undermine the season.
Van-Tam recorded a second video that the Premier League will share with fans to stress the importance of getting fully immunised. It is expected to be shared on Premier League social media accounts.
The pressure on players to get the jab is due to increase this week when the
Government meets to discuss plans to make vaccine passports mandatory for anyone attending an event attracting a crowd of more than 20,000 people. Ministers are expected to make it compulsory for fans to have had two doses of vaccine amid fears that matches could become Covid hotspots.
Sources said the Department of Health and Social Care were in contact with the Premier League over the summer about the role footballers could play in encouraging young people to get immunised. The league returned to the DHSC in recent weeks amid increasing unease at the number of players who have chosen not to get jabbed, as this newspaper has highlighted in recent weeks.
Van-Tam, a Boston United supporter and keen football fan, was keen to get involved and recorded the videos at the end of last week. Along with the Premier League medical officer Mark Gillett, Van-Tam had addressed a virtual meeting of the League’s captains’ group on August 2 to address myths circulating among players and underline the importance to wider society of getting the jab.
Richard Masters, the Premier League chief executive, said at the time that he hoped the ‘vast majority’ of players would have done so by the end of this month.
However, last week it was revealed that almost a third of players in the English Football League were not immunised and had no plans to get jabbed.
Arsenal midfielder Granit Xhaka, meanwhile, went into isolation after he chose not to get immunised and subsequently tested positive for the disease while on international duty with Switzerland.
A message from Jose Mourinho’s verified Instagram account responded with the message: ‘Get the jab Granit and be safe.’
Xhaka’s club-mates Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Alexandre Lacazette were among four players ruled of Arsenal’s Premier League defeat by Brentford after testing positive for Covid.
Both Scotland’s and Wales’s squads have been depleted by Covid for this international break, with Robert Page’s Welsh squad missing 10 players from their previous competitive fixture for today’s match against Belarus.
Scotland’s initial squad of 26 players was reduced to 15 outfield players plus three goalkeepers ahead of last week’s World Cup qualifying defeat by Denmark. Several players returned for last night’s match against Moldova.
Manchester United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and Steve Bruce, his Newcastle counterpart, admitted last month that members of their squads had also refused to get inoculated. Bruce said players were being deterred by conspiracy theories about the supposed risks of the vaccine and the motivation for its rollout, while Solskjaer said some of his squad were ‘not sure’ about getting it.
A Mail on Sunday survey of clubs in the top four divisions found that clubs with players who had chosen not to get vaccinated included Cardiff, Middlesbrough, Millwall, Oldham, Bradford, Harrogate and Morecambe. Cardiff manager Mick McCarthy said: ‘I’d like to think everybody would want to have it, but not everybody does.
‘I don’t know about all the conspiracy theories out there. Some think they are putting a chip into you and are then able to follow you around. They can do that with your phone these days — and every one of them has a phone. I had [the jab] and I couldn’t wait to get it. I didn’t want to be laid up with Covid. It doesn’t seem to affect the younger guys so much. It is their choice and we can’t make them have it.’
This newspaper last week asked each Premier League club if they wanted to join Wolves, Leeds and Brentford in revealing what proportion of their squad had been vaccinated, but none did so. The majority of them cited medical confidentiality as the reason.
Wolves confirmed that all of their squad had been double-jabbed, while Brentford said 89 per cent of their players had received at least one dose and most of them were fully vaccinated.
Leeds United’s squad were reported to have been 96 per cent vaccinated with the remaining planning to get the jab.
Sports minister Nigel Huddleston said it was incumbent on footballers to set an example.
‘The evidence is overwhelming that getting vaccinated is good for your own health and helps protect others,’ he said. ‘We therefore strongly encourage everyone to get vaccinated. Sports stars are role models and particularly influential with young people.’
England manager Gareth Southgate, however, yesterday said players should be given the freedom to make the call.
‘Players are old enough to make their own decisions,’ Southgate said, ‘so coaches can give advice, can explain the benefits or otherwise but in the end players have got to
make their own decisions.’
PREMIER LEAGUE chiefs have resorted to making a video with the Government to persuade players to get the Covid jab.
Jonathan Van-Tam, deputy chief medical officer, has recorded footage dispelling vaccine myths that will be circulated among top squads.
The Mail on Sunday understands that football authorities approached the Government asking to team up amid increased concern about the number of footballers refusing to get jabbed. Professor Van-Tam recorded footage on Friday addressing concerns put to him by a Premier League representative. The video is set to be shared among players in the Premier League and Football League to avoid more of the Covidenforced setbacks threatening to create havoc with the new season. Van-Tam recorded another video aimed at fans which stressed the importance of getting fully immunised.
He emphasised the importance of continuing to take precautions amid fears stadiums could become Covid hotspots. These included wearing a mask and washing hands regularly, with the video to be shared on Premier League social media accounts.
The Department of Health and Social Care is understood to have been in contact with the Premier League over the summer about the role footballers could play in encouraging young people to get immunised.
The pressure on players to get the jab is due to increase this week when the Government discusses plans to make vaccine passports required from anyone who attends an event with a crowd of more than 20,000.
It will probably become mandatory for fans to have had both shots despite players not being required to do so. Almost a third of English Football League players have not been immunised.