The Day

Watford player among six positive for COVID-19 in EPL

- By ROB HARRIS

Manchester, England — A player and two staff members from Watford were among six people who tested positive for the coronaviru­s in the Premier League's first wave of mass testing ahead of a planned return to partial training during the pandemic.

Burnley said assistant manager Ian Woan was also among the six positive COVID-19 tests announced on Tuesday by the Premier League, which did not identify any individual­s. The other two cases were found at a single undisclose­d club.

Tests on 748 people were conducted across 19 clubs on Sunday and Monday. The 20th club, which also was not identified, started testing on Tuesday.

The infections among Watford personnel were announced after club captain Troy Deeney said he would not take part in social-distanced training sessions.

The striker said he raised concerns when the protocols were presented to players last week.

“Within the meeting I asked very simple questions,” Deeney told a boxing YouTube show. “For black, Asian and mixed ethnicitie­s they are four times more likely to get the illness and twice as likely to have long-lasting illness: Is there any additional screening? Heart stuff to see if anyone has a problem?

“I feel that should be addressed. I can't get a haircut until mid-July but I can go and get in a box with 19 people and jump for a header? I don't know how that works. No one could answer the questions — not because they didn't want to, because they didn't have the informatio­n. I just said ‘If you don't know the informatio­n, why would I put myself at risk?'"

Watford said its training ground was “virus-free and a safe environmen­t for the players to continue to work” and that the three people with the coronaviru­s would now self-isolate for a week before being tested again.

Danny Rose, the Tottenham defender on loan at Newcastle, also expressed concerns about returning to training as the league tries to restart next month, having been suspended since March.

“I'm dying to get back to football but just with the things that are happening right now, people are going through this coronaviru­s pandemic a lot worse than me, I don't want to be complainin­g about everything,” Rose told The Lockdown Tactics podcast. “Just off the fact that people are suggesting we should go back to football, like we're guinea pigs or lab rats.

“We've going to experiment this phase and see if it works or not. I can just imagine people at home saying, ‘Well they earn that amount of money so they should be going back.'”

A relaxation of national lockdown regulation­s is only now allowing non-contact training to resume, with a maximum of five players working together for up to 75 minutes a day at training facilities.

But the aim of restarting around June 12 looks hard to meet. Approval for contact training and games resuming rely on there being no new spike in COVID-19 cases in the country with the second highest known deaths from the disease after the United States.

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