The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Strong message sent to Premier League clubs

- By Rob Harris

Premier League clubs opposed to trying to resume in empty stadiums are urged to accept the plans or the “game might never fully recover.”

The Premier League could face years of legal challenges if this season is not completed due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, the chairman of Crystal Palace warned May 3.

Steve Parish offered public support for the league’s “Project Restart” plans after relegation-threatened Brighton and West Ham expressed concerns about teams being forced to play their remaining games in neutral stadiums.

The league is working with the government to find a safe way for players to resume group training and play games by June at the earliest.

But the French and Dutch league seasons have already been halted by their government­s amid ongoing concerns about sporting fixtures spreading COVID-19 infections. While Paris Saint-Germain was crowned French champion last week despite Ligue 1 ending prematurel­y, Ajax will not be awarded the Dutch title.

“I want to complete the competitio­n for reasons of sporting integrity,” Parish said in a column published Sunday on the Palace website. “I want to crown Liverpool champions and give every other club a fair crack at the best league position they can achieve. I certainly don’t want to have difficult conversati­ons about curtailing, voiding and points per game.

“The ramificati­ons of each are complex and could involve legal challenges that run on for months, if not years. But, yes, it is partly about the money. And we should all care about the money.”

Parish highlighte­d the “many secondary industries football enriches,” with the Premier League fearing losses of more than 1 billion pounds from an incomplete campaign as broadcasti­ng commitment­s are not met.

“Nobody wins if the Premier League receives less money,” Parish said. “Football is one of the most efficient tax-generating industries in Britain: we pay the players a lot but 50 percent goes straight back into the public purse. Overall we pay about 3.3 billion pounds in tax every year and it is the Premier League that largely funds the whole football pyramid.”

The national lockdown remains in place through Thursday in Britain where more than 28,000 people have died in around two months in hospitals, care homes and the wider community after testing positive for the new coronaviru­s.

Parish’s explanatio­n of “Project Restart” came as the Premier League faced heavy criticism from one of the main pundits for the broadcaste­r that provides the league’s single biggest revenue stream.

Gary Neville, the former England and Manchester

United defender turned Sky Sports commentato­r, said the Premier League was having a “nightmare” and was “hiding, scared to death of communicat­ing” its plans fully in public. The league has not made any official available for interview since the competitio­n was suspended almost two months ago.

“I want football to return. I also understand the complexiti­es,” Neville said in a response to Parish’s tweet linking to his column. “No one wants to be responsibl­e for this one! Just in case the unthinkabl­e happens . ... I’d respect them more if they said ‘We accept the increase in Health Risk but it’s one we are willing to take.’ They won’t as they are frightened to death!”

The Spanish league has been communicat­ing its plans more substantia­lly ahead of players resuming training individual­ly at the clubs’ facilities on Monday while observing a series of safety measures pre-establishe­d by the league and local authoritie­s, including regular COVID-19 testing.

There is more uncertaint­y in Italy where the government has only allowed players in regions containing eight of the 20 Serie A clubs to resume individual training from Monday.

While the leagues in England, Italy and Spain will not start until at least June, the German top flight is hoping to resume this month.

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 ?? RUI VIEIRA - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tthe English Premier League trophy is displayed on the pitch prior to a match between Manchester City and Huddersfie­ld Town at Etihad stadium in Manchester, England, May 6, 2018.
RUI VIEIRA - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tthe English Premier League trophy is displayed on the pitch prior to a match between Manchester City and Huddersfie­ld Town at Etihad stadium in Manchester, England, May 6, 2018.

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