The Guardian (USA)

Four Premiershi­p players test positive for coronaviru­s with restart looming

- Paul Rees

Four Premiershi­p players have tested positive for Covid-19, little more than a fortnight before the league is set to resume after five months in lockdown.

Tests have been conducted on players and staff at every club each Monday this month. Ten, including six players, initially tested positive, followed by nine, two of whom were staff, but last week the number fell to two, both players. The latest total is five from 846 tests.

Those who test positive are isolated, along with their close contacts, and are assessed in line with the guidelines agreed with Public Health England. It is the second successive week in which the number of positive tests is less than 1%, but it contrasts with Wales which is running the same procedure for players, and where all the results so far have been negative.

The Premiershi­p restart will see several new faces at clubs on the playing and coaching fronts and Leicester’s new head coach, Steve Borthwick, has warned the club’s supporters that the road back to success will be long and hard after two seasons when the Tigers have flirted with relegation.

“I am not going to set goals,” said Borthwick, who spent the previous eight years working with Eddie Jones, first with Japan and then England. “What I want to do is make the club’s passionate supporters very proud of the team. There is a lot of work to be done but for me it is a privilege to be involved with a club like this.

“What I am asking of the players is their very best effort and I have seen that every day I have been here. We have new signings coming in and we need to create depth because that brings competitio­n for places. I feel a real excitement about what we are trying to do. The circumstan­ces are different because of the current restrictio­ns, but you have to adapt and get on with it.”

Leicester have lost four experience­d backs since they last played in March with Jonny May rejoining Gloucester while Manu Tuilagi, Telusa Veainu and Kyle Eastmond left after refusing to sign contracts on reduced pay.

“Things change,” said Borthwick. “No one could have predicted these last few months. You adapt and you overcome. My priority is to ensure that everyone has a clear idea on how we play and appreciate that we are competing. I want a team that works exceptiona­lly hard so that supporters can see effort and togetherne­ss.

“People are realistic about where this squad is right now and the amount of work we have to do and the time it will take. I do not feel any pressure because the expectatio­ns I put on myself have always been high. I know we have a lot of ground to make up and we are getting on with it.”

Borthwick said he had gained from working under Jones, adding: “I learned an incredible amount from Eddie and will be eternally grateful for the opportunit­ies he gave me and the effort he put in to help my developmen­t as a coach. He sets an example to everyone.”

 ??  ?? The Premiershi­p season is due to resume on 14 August when Harlequins play Sale at Twickenham Stoop. Photograph: Warren Little/Getty Images
The Premiershi­p season is due to resume on 14 August when Harlequins play Sale at Twickenham Stoop. Photograph: Warren Little/Getty Images

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