Soccer: Bundesliga season resumes on May 16 with empty stadiums

BERLIN (Reuters) – The Bundesliga season will restart on May 16 after a suspension of more than two months, the German Football League (DFL) said on Thursday, becoming the first European league to resume amid the coronavirus pandemic.

FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football – Bundesliga – Borussia Moenchengladbach v FC Cologne – Borussia-Park, Moenchengladbach, Germany – March 11, 2020 General view of a match ball during the warm up before the match that will be played behind closed while the number of coronavirus cases grow around the world REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay/File Photo DFL regulations prohibit any use of photographs as image sequences and/or quasi-video

The DFL said the season would restart under the terms of a strict health protocol that bans fans from the stadium, with six games on Saturday, including the high-profile Ruhr valley derby between Borussia Dortmund and Schalke 04.

The derby and four other matches will start at 1330GMT while Eintracht Frankfurt will host Borussia Moenchengladbach at 1630GMT. League leaders Bayern Munich face Union Berlin in one of two games on Sunday while one more will be played on Monday.

“The interest (globally) is big. I see reports from across the world that we are the first major league to return,” DFL CEO Christian Seifert told a news conference.

“This is only possible because we have the privilege to live in a country with one of the most modern health systems in the world.”

He was speaking by video conference after a meeting with first and second division clubs following the government’s decision on Wednesday to give the green light for the Bundesliga to restart in the second half of May and throw a financial lifeline to the cash-strapped clubs.

Seifert said there would be no Friday match in the first week as the government’s order was for play to resume in the second part of the month.

“Friday the 15th is not in the second half of the month,” Seifert said.

Bayern, chasing an eighth successive Bundesliga title, currently lead the table with 55 points from 25 games, four ahead of Dortmund with RB Leipzig third on 50. There are nine rounds of matches left to play this season.

UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin welcomed the return of football in Germany and wished everyone involved every success.

“It is great news that the German authorities have agreed that the Bundesliga can return,” he said. “This is a huge and positive step to bringing optimism back to people’s lives.

“It is the result of constructive dialogue and careful planning between the football authorities and politicians and 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.”

COMPLETE ISOLATION

All teams will have to go into a seven-day training camp in complete isolation before May 16 with players tested before their inclusion in the camps to reduce the risk of any infection.

About 300 people, including players, staff and officials, will be in and around the stadiums during matchdays.

“The matches will feel different. After the first matchday we will all know why we prefer games with fans,” Seifert said. “But that is the framework we have to operate in and I expect the best possible sport within this framework.”

The DFL is desperate to finish the season by June 30 to be contractually in compliance with sponsors and broadcasters and because more than 100 players’ contracts are running out on that date, Seifert said.

The DFL has warned any further delay could be “existence-threatening” for some clubs.

“The season finale will take place at the end of June,” Seifert added, with June 27-28 as a likely date.

He said ideally he hoped the new season would start some time in August but a date had not been finalised.

The teams have been training since mid-April, divided into small groups and under strict conditions, including extensive COVID-19 testing of all players and coaching staff.

The country has reported more than 166,000 infections and over 7,000 deaths and officials said on Thursday the coronavirus crisis was far from over despite the country slowly reopening its economy and trying to get life back to normal.

Reporting by Karolos Grohmann; Additional reporting by Simon Evans in London; editing by John Stonestreet/Christian Radnedge/Ken Ferris

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source: reuters.com