The Scotsman

Bundesliga to resume on 16 May as Germany leads way in Europe

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The German Bundesliga season will resume on 16 May in empty stadiums, picking up right where it left off two months ago amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Yesterday’s announceme­nt comes a day after clubs were told the season could restart. That followed a meeting between German Chancellor Angela Merkel and the country’s 16 state governors, making the Bundesliga the first of Europe’s “Big Five” leagues to be given the green light after competitio­ns across the continent were suspended.

“Everyone has to be clear. We’re playing on probation,” German football league managing director Christian Seifert said. “I expect everyone to live up to this responsibi­lity. Our concept is designed to catch infections early.”

Seifert said the return of football was because of the success the country’s leaders and health officials have had in response to the outbreak.

Germany has had a high number of Covid-19 infections – nearly 170,000, according to Johns Hopkins University – with about 7,000 deaths, a lower number compared to elsewhere.

The country’s relative success in combating the virus has been attributed to early testing, a robust health service and strict lockdown measures that are now being loosened.

“That we’re allowed to play again boils down to German politics for managing this crisis, and the health system in Germany,” Seifert said. “If I were to name the number of tests that I was asked about in teleconfer­ences with other profession­al leagues, with American profession­al leagues, with clubs from the NFL, the NHL, Major League Baseball and others, and I tell them how many tests are possible in Germany, they generally check, or there’s silence, because it’s just unimaginab­le in the situation over there.”

Only about a third of Germany’s

massive testing capacity of almost 1 million a week is being currently used, said Lars Schaade, the deputy head of the Robert Koch Institute.

Though the French league has already been cancelled, the Bundesliga’s return has given hope to football officials in Spain, Italy and England that they may yet also finish their seasons.

“I am confident that Germany will provide a shining example to all of us in how to bring football – with all its excitement, emotion and unpredicta­bility – back into our lives,” said Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin.

Seifert said the season will restart with the 26th round of games, including the Ruhr derby between Borussia Dortmund and Schalke on the opening Saturday. That match will test local authoritie­s who hope to keep groups of fans from gathering around the stadium or at bars to watch on television.

TV broadcaste­r Sky said it will show some games on the first two weekends for free in Germany. BT Sport has exclusive rights in the UK to show live Bundesliga matches.

Seifert warned that everyone involved will need to maintain strict hygiene measures to ensure another suspension will not be necessary.

The Bundesliga was suspended 2 Borussia Dortmund’s Signal Iduna Park will host the Ruhr derby against Schalke on Saturday 16 May without spectators. on 13 March with nine rounds remaining. Seifert said the last round is now planned for the weekend of 27-28 June. He said the second division will also begin on 16 May.

“The decision means economic survival for some clubs,” Seifert said.

Seifert confirmed there have been ten positive cases of Covid-19 in the first two waves of tests among the 36 profession­al clubs, with another two positive cases found in a third wave.

It was initially planned that teams would spend two weeks in quarantine before games could resume, but a compromise on shorter training camps in isolation for each team was reached because players have been undergoing regular tests.

“Everyone has to be clear. We’re playing on probation. I expect everyone to live up to this responsibi­lity. Our concept is designed to catch infections early”

CHRISTIAN SEIFERT

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