Soccer: European leagues to resume, Denmark gets creative

BERN (Reuters) – European soccer will continue its cautious return to play following the COVID-19 stoppage over the next week as a number of the continent’s smaller leagues restart with some novelties and one team in serious trouble for breaking coronavirus rules.

FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football – Tottenham Hotspur Stadium Test Event – Under 18 Premier League – Tottenham Hotspur v Southampton – Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London, Britain – March 24, 2019 General view inside the stadium before the match REUTERS/David Klein

Portugal, Denmark, Poland, Serbia, Austria, Croatia and Ukraine are among countries which will again be able to enjoy league soccer, albeit in unusual circumstances with no spectators allowed at games.

They join Hungary, Czech Republic, Estonia and the Faroe Islands where play has already restarted. Germany’s Bundesliga is the only one of the big five leagues to have resumed.

The leagues, which have been exchanging information, will use similar health precautions which include regular testing of players, a limit of around 300 people allowed in the stadium and bans on pre-match handshakes, mascots and team photographs.

However, leagues are taking different approaches to the dilemma of livening up empty stadiums with Denmark the most creative.

The Superliga is due to restart on Thursday evening with third-placed AGF Aarhus hosting Randers in front of a “virtual grandstand” of screens which will transmit images of watching fans via the digital platform Zoom.

Meanwhile, leaders Midtjylland, who host Horsens on Monday, will set up a drive-in cinema with space for 2,000 cars outside their MCH Arena.

Portugal, where there are 10 rounds of matches to play, will offer its fans a feast of summer soccer when it returns from June 3 with leaders Porto away to Famalicao and second-placed Benfica at home to Tondela the following day.

To televise as many games as possible, each round of matches will be played over four to six days with one rest day in between.

Some teams will not be able to play at home as the government’s DGS health directorate has judged that their stadiums are not suitable for the strict health measures which have to be put in place.

While conditions may be unusual, the championship itself has an all-too-familiar feel, having turned into a two-horse race between Porto and Benfica who are separated by one point.

The biggest setback has been in Austria where league leaders LSK Linz were on Thursday docked six points after they admitted to breaking coronavirus rules by prematurely resuming full training sessions.

Linz saw their three-point lead disappear in a significant blow to their hopes of denying new leaders Salzburg a seventh successive title.

Poland’s Ekstraklasa, with 11 rounds of matches to play, restarts on Friday with two matches while leaders Legia Warsawa visit Lech Poznan on Saturday. Serbia’s SuperLig also restarts on Friday.

The Ukraine Premier League gets under way with three matches on Saturday. The following day, leaders Shakhtar Donetsk face third-placed Dynamo Kiev, while Croatia’s First League restarts on May 5.

Reporting by Brian Homewood, editing by Pritha Sarkar and Ed Osmond

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source: reuters.com