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Coronavirus Pandemic : How is it affecting sports worldwide?

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Coronavirus latest - Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta and England and Chelsea winger Callum Hudson-Odoi test positive

Arsenal's Premier League game with Brighton postponed

Chelsea and Arsenal squads self-isolating

Golf's Players Championship cancelled

The UK government is considering banning sporting fixtures

Uefa to discuss possible Euro 2020 postponement on Tuesday
 
La Liga is suspended.

Champions League and Europa League is likely to be suspended.

Football is Portugal and Netherlands suspended.

And many more..
 
All major sport in the United States has been suspended amid the coronavirus outbreak.

The NBA has announced that all matches will be suspended from Thursday until further notice, after a Utah Jazz player Rudy Gobert tested positive.

The NHL and MLS later announced the stoppage of its respective seasons, the latter for 30 days.

The MLB has delayed the start of its 2020 season by at least two weeks due to the "national emergency".

The other major US sports league - the NFL - is currently in its off-season, although the 2020 Draft in Las Vegas is scheduled to start on 23 April.

Men's and women's college basketball has also been cancelled, just a day after it was announced it would initially continue without spectators.

The NCAA, the governing body of US college sport, announced the Division I men's and women's tournaments would be cancelled, in addition to remaining winter and spring NCAA tournaments.

The Division I men's basketball tournament, known as March Madness, is one of the biggest and most popular sports events in the United States.

Gobert tested negative for influenza and a respiratory infection, and then tested positive for Covid-19, the current strain of coronavirus
The NBA's announcement was made just before the Jazz game against the Oklahoma Thunder was due to start on Wednesday.

The NBA said Gobert was not at the game, which was postponed, but the Frenchman has since had to issue an apology for potentially exposing others to the virus.

Earlier this week, he jokingly touched reporters' microphones and dictaphones at a pre-match news conference.

"I have gone through so many emotions since learning of my diagnosis, mostly fear, anxiety, and embarrassment," he wrote on Instagram.

"The first and most important thing is I would like to publicly apologise to the people that I may have endangered. At the time, I had no idea I was even infected. I was careless and make no excuse.

"I hope my story serves as a warning and causes everyone to take this seriously."

In a statement, the NBA said: "The NBA will use this hiatus to determine next steps for moving forward in regard to the coronavirus pandemic."

Orlando Magic player Evan Fournier tweeted about Gobert after the news of his diagnosis broke, writing: "Was just on the phone with Rudy. He is doing good man. Let's not panic, everyone."

The owner of the Dallas Mavericks, Mark Cuban, heard about the NBA decision at the game with the Denver Nuggets on Wednesday evening.

"I thought this is crazy. It can't be true," he said. "It is like out of a movie. Unreal.

"It is not about basketball and money. This is exploding to the point where I think about the families. We are making sure we are doing this the right way."

Detroit Pistons coach Dwayne Casey called it "unprecedented", while Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said he was "stunned".

"It's a very serious time right now. I think the league moved appropriately," Spoelstra added.

Prior to the NBA announcement, the Golden State Warriors were set to play their home game against the Brooklyn Nets on Thursday behind closed doors.

That was prompted by ban in San Francisco on mass gatherings of more than 1,000 people for at least the next two weeks in a bid to slow the spread of coronavirus.

In the past, NBA seasons have been delayed - the schedule was shortened in 1998-99 and 2011-12 because of protracted negotiations over a new collective bargaining agreement - but it has never before been suspended while in progress.

There are five weeks remaining in the regular season with the play-offs due to begin on 18 April.

If the season does not resume it could mean Atlanta Hawks forward Vince Carter has played his final NBA game.

The 43-year-old, who was retiring at the end of this season, is the first NBA player to have a career spanning four decades.

"It's a weird way to say I'm calling it a career. It really is," Carter said after the Hawks' 136-131 loss to the New York Knicks on Wednesday. "I have 15 games left, technically. But if not, I'm one with it."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/basketball/51847482
 
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All Uefa competitions, including Champions League and Europa League matches due to be played on 17 and 18 March, have been postponed because of the coronavirus outbreak.

Uefa has announced that the competition draws scheduled for 20 March have also been postponed.
 
All elite football in England has been suspended until at least 3 April as a result of the spread of coronavirus.

All Premier League games, EFL fixtures and matches in the FA Women's Super League and Women's Championship have been postponed.
 
Good steps.

Sports are not bigger than lives. Let's take care of this virus first.
 
April's London Marathon has been postponed and rearranged for 4 October because of the coronavirus outbreak.

The event was scheduled to take place around the streets of the city on Sunday, 26 April.

It is the first time the race has been postponed since its launch in 1981.

"The world is in an unprecedented situation, grappling with a global pandemic of Covid-19, and public health is everyone's priority," said event director Hugh Brasher.

Organisers say every runner with a marathon place will be eligible for the new October date, but they can claim a refund if they want to.

Nearly 43,000 runners competed in 2019, with £66.4m raised for charity.

"We know how disappointing this news will be for so many - the runners who have trained for many months, the thousands of charities for which they are raising funds and the millions who watch the race every year," added Brasher.

"We know that there will be many, many questions from runners, charities and others and we ask you to please bear with us as we work through the detailed planning process to deliver the 2020 London Marathon on its new scheduled date."

It is the latest sporting event to be cancelled as authorities seek to limit the spread of the virus.

On Friday, all elite football in Britain, including the Premier League, EFL, FA Women's Super League and Scottish Premiership, was suspended until at least April 3.

Golf's PGA Tour cancelled all events until 16 April including the Players Championship, which began in Florida on Thursday, and next month's Masters in Augusta.

The England cricket team's two-Test series in Sri Lanka has also been called off.

At the time of publication (17:00 GMT) more than 132,500 people have been diagnosed with Covid-19 in 123 countries around the world, according to the World Health Organization. The total number of deaths worldwide is nearly 5,000.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/51878234
 
Cardiff City manager Neil Harris says a player and a member of staff at the club are self-isolating amid the coronavirus outbreak.
 
ST. JOHN’S, Antigua - Cricket West Indies (CWI) acting on the recommendation of its Medical Advisory Committee (MAC) has taken the decision to suspend all CWI Tournaments and face-to-face group meetings, from Monday March 16, for a minimum of 30 days.

CWI Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Israel Dowlat, stated “the health and safety of our players, officials and staff, are of paramount importance to CWI and we have advised the Board of Directors to take proactive policy steps to decrease the growing risk of contamination and spread of the virus”.

Chairman of the MAC, Dr Donovan Bennett, stated, “We are acting based on medical best practice as well as in an abundance of caution. The ongoing gathering of even small groups of spectators, cricketers and match officials could pose a risk to some persons of contracting the virus and being stranded in quarantine in a non-resident country for a prolonged period. Clearly this pandemic is still evolving, and we will continue to monitor the situation throughout the Caribbean”.

The following CWI tournaments have been suspended:

Final two rounds of the West indies Championship – 26th to 29th March and 2nd – 5th April

The Women’s CMI Super 50 Cup, Guyana – 27th March to 12th April

Regional Under 15s Boys Championship, Antigua – 9th to 20th April

Regional Under 19s Girls Championship, Trinidad – 6th to 12th April

The following upcoming CWI meetings will be postponed, with all urgent CWI Board matters to be addressed via teleconference. More details and logistics will be forthcoming over the coming week.

CWI, Board of Directors’ meeting – scheduled for Antigua 17th & 18th April

CWI Annual General Meeting – scheduled for Antigua 19th April

CWI has also advised all Territorial Boards and Local Cricket Associations to follow the advice of their respective Ministries of Health.
 
Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the Tokyo Olympic Games will go ahead as planned in July, despite coronavirus concerns resulting in the postponement of sporting events.

Abe added the International Olympic Committee (IOC) would have the final decision whether Tokyo 2020 goes ahead.

"We will overcome the spread of the infection and host the Olympics without problem, as planned," Abe said.

Japan has had more than 1,400 cases and 28 deaths resulting from coronavirus.

Coronavirus wipes out most of world's major sports events
Coronavirus in sport latest
The Tokyo Games is expected to cost about 1.35 trillion yen (£10.26bn), organisers said in December.

The Japan section of the Olympic Torch relay is due to start in Fukushima on 26 March. The recent torch-lighting ceremony in ancient Olympia was held without spectators, before the rest of the relay in Greece was suspended to avoid attracting crowds.

Tokyo governor Yuriko Koike said: "We're taking thorough infection measures with regards to the torch relay domestically."

Several Olympic trials events in the United States have been postponed, including wrestling, rowing and diving.

However, the boxing events in London will go ahead on Saturday as scheduled.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/olympics/51888491
 
Wayne Rooney says the government and football authorities have treated footballers as "guinea pigs" during the coronavirus outbreak.

Elite football in Britain has been suspended until at least 3 April, with the Premier League saying "conditions at the time" will determine its return.

"For players, staff and their families it has been a worrying week," he said.

"One in which you felt a lack of leadership from the government and from the FA and Premier League."

Writing in his column in the Sunday Times, the former England captain said: "The rest of sport - tennis, Formula 1, rugby, golf, football in other countries - was closing down and we were being told to carry on.

"I think a lot of footballers were wondering, 'Is it something to do with money being involved in this?'. Why did we wait until Friday? Why did it take Mikel Arteta [Arsenal manager] to get ill for the game in England to do the right thing?

"After the emergency meeting, at last the right decision was made - until then it almost felt like footballers in England were being treated like guinea pigs.

"I know how I feel. If any of my family get infected through me because I've had to play when it's not safe, and they get seriously ill, I'd have to think hard about ever playing again. I would never forgive the authorities."

Now, 34 the former Everton and Manchester United player is just over two months into his time as a player-coach at Championship club Derby.

The Rams are currently five points off a play-off berth in the second tier with nine games of the season remaining, and Rooney believes there will have to be a radical restructure of the football calendar to allow fixtures to be fulfilled.

"We're happy to play until September if the season extends to then, if that's how it has to be. That's our job," Rooney added.

"As long as we know we're safe to play and it's a safe environment for spectators, we'll play.

"The next World Cup is in November and December 2022, so you could actually use this situation as an opportunity and say we're going to finish the 2019-20 season later this year, then prepare for 2022 by having the next two seasons starting in winter."

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/51896488
 
The Grand National, due to take place on 4 April, has been cancelled because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The Jockey Club said "it is no longer appropriate to stage the event" after the UK government advised against mass gatherings.

It said that running the race behind closed doors at Aintree was "no longer a viable consideration".

"Public health must come first," said Sandy Dudgeon, senior steward of The Jockey Club.

"We were working on a plan to stage the Grand National behind closed doors given its importance to the racing industry and beyond, but following the new government measures confirmed this evening to help to tackle the coronavirus outbreak, this is not a viable option.

"I know this is hugely disappointing news for the many people who work in our sport and the many millions who were looking forward to this year's event, but very sadly these are exceptional times and this is the responsible thing to do."

Horse racing to go behind closed doors
The world famous steeplechase attracts a worldwide audience of about 500m people.

Tiger Roll, who won the race in 2018 and 2019, was favourite for an unprecedented third consecutive victory.

More than 1,500 people have tested positive for coronavirus in the UK, but the actual number of cases is estimated to be between 35,000 and 50,000.

As in so many other areas of life, the virus has dealt a body-blow to horseracing, which has had the Grand National at its centre since the race's inception in the 1830s; also to British and indeed Irish sport considering the Tiger Roll angle; to the betting industry which had been looking forward to another boom time; and to the economy of Merseyside given a notable boost by the event.

Clearly, opponents will be less unhappy.

It was going to be hard but possible for the race to take place, even behind closed doors, in the current climate until the latest restrictions were brought in.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/horse-racing/51919794
 
The Grand National, due to take place on 4 April, has been cancelled because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The Jockey Club said "it is no longer appropriate to stage the event" after the UK government advised against mass gatherings.

It said that running the race behind closed doors at Aintree was "no longer a viable consideration".

"Public health must come first," said Sandy Dudgeon, senior steward of The Jockey Club.

"We were working on a plan to stage the Grand National behind closed doors given its importance to the racing industry and beyond, but following the new government measures confirmed this evening to help to tackle the coronavirus outbreak, this is not a viable option.

"I know this is hugely disappointing news for the many people who work in our sport and the many millions who were looking forward to this year's event, but very sadly these are exceptional times and this is the responsible thing to do."

Horse racing to go behind closed doors
The world famous steeplechase attracts a worldwide audience of about 500m people.

Tiger Roll, who won the race in 2018 and 2019, was favourite for an unprecedented third consecutive victory.

More than 1,500 people have tested positive for coronavirus in the UK, but the actual number of cases is estimated to be between 35,000 and 50,000.

As in so many other areas of life, the virus has dealt a body-blow to horseracing, which has had the Grand National at its centre since the race's inception in the 1830s; also to British and indeed Irish sport considering the Tiger Roll angle; to the betting industry which had been looking forward to another boom time; and to the economy of Merseyside given a notable boost by the event.

Clearly, opponents will be less unhappy.

It was going to be hard but possible for the race to take place, even behind closed doors, in the current climate until the latest restrictions were brought in.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/horse-racing/51919794

Though I love National and wanted to see Tiger Roll creating history but its a sensible decision to cancel the event. Surprised they allowed Cheltenham Festival to go ahead though where on avg 70K people were on attendance each day.
 
Euro 2020 postponed until next summer, says the Norwegian FA

Euro 2020 has been postponed by one year until 2021 because of the coronavirus pandemic, says the Norwegian FA.

Uefa, European football's governing body, is holding an emergency video conference involving major stakeholders on Tuesday.

The Norwegian FA says it was decided that the tournament will now take place from 11 June to 11 July next year.

BBC Sport understands the decision will be signed off by Uefa later on Tuesday.

The tournament was due to take place from 12 June-12 July this year at 12 venues across Europe.

The postponement provides a chance for European leagues that have been suspended to now be completed.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/51909518
 
The 2020 Copa America has been postponed until next summer due to the coronavirus outbreak.
 
The French Open has been moved to September and October as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

The event at Rolland Garros was due to be played from 24 May to 7 June, but instead will take place between 20 September and 4 October.

That means it will begin just one week after the completion of the US Open in New York.

All professional tennis across the world is currently suspended until at least 20 April.

The French Open is usually the second grand slam of the year and the finale of the clay court part of the season.

It will now be the final major of the year, and the new dates clash with a number of other events, including the Laver Cup, an annual men's event between a team from Europe and a team representing the rest of the world.

The French tennis federation said the move was made to "guarantee the health and safety of all those involved in the preparation of the tournament".

It added: "While no one today can predict what the health situation will be like on 18 May [when qualification was due to start], the lockdown measures in force make it impossible to prepare for it and therefore to organise it on the dates initially planned."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/tennis/51930214
 
We all hear about big sporting events being canceled or postponed. What we don't hear about is spring high school sports being canceled here in US. It's a big deal for lot of kids, especially for the seniors who have spent years training and practicing for this moment. I know bunch of kids who are absolutely gutted, unlike pro sports High School and college sports have only 4 years of eligibility and it is once in a life time opportunity for many kids.
In the grand scheme of things this is not a big issue for many, but for the athlete who has worked all their life for this opportunity is a big deal.
 
Juventus and France midfielder Blaise Matuidi has tested positive for coronavirus.
 
Kevin Durant has confirmed he is one of the Brooklyn Nets players to have tested positive for coronavirus.

On Tuesday the Nets said four unnamed players had COVID-19 and one was displaying symptoms.

Ten-time NBA All-Star Durant confirmed he had the virus, telling The Athletic's Shams Charania: "Everyone be careful, take care of yourself and quarantine. We're going to get through this."

The 31-year-old is yet to play for the Nets since joining ahead of this season because of an Achilles injury he sustained in last year's NBA Finals when he was with the Golden State Warriors.

Durant won two NBA titles with the Warriors, has been named Finals MVP twice and was the league's MVP in 2014.

In a statement released to media earlier, the Nets said: "Four Brooklyn Nets players have tested positive for the COVID-19 virus. Of the four, one player is exhibiting symptoms while three are asymptomatic. All four players are presently isolated and under the care of team physicians.

"The organisation is currently notifying anyone who has had known contact with the players, including recent opponents, and is working closely with state and local health authorities on reporting.

"All players and members of the Nets travel party are being asked to remain isolated, closely monitor their health and maintain constant communication with team medical staff. The health of our players and staff is of the highest priority to the organisation and the team is doing everything within its power to ensure that those affected receive the best care possible.

"As always, we appreciate the support of our fans, partners and surrounding community, and we wish all those who are battling this virus a speedy recovery."

The NBA is suspended, along with most sport leagues globally, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Nets were last in action on March 10 when they earned a 104-102 win over the Los Angeles Lakers at Staples Center.

https://sportstar.thehindu.com/othe...-isolation-quarantine-usa/article31095616.ece
 
The United States Tennis Association (USTA) says it has not ruled out the possibility of switching the US Open to a later date, after the French Open was moved back to September.

USTA says it is assessing all options but is not currently implementing any changes to its schedule.

The US Open, which is played in New York, is due to begin on 31 August.

USTA also criticised the French Tennis Federation's unilateral decision to move the dates of Roland Garros.

The event in Paris was due to be played from 24 May to 7 June, but instead will take place from 20 September to 4 October.

That means it will begin just one week after the completion of the US Open.

"At a time when the world is coming together, we recognise that such a decision should not be made unilaterally," the statement said.

"Therefore the USTA would only [act] in full consultation with the other Grand Slam tournaments, the WTA and ATP, the ITF and our partners, including the Laver Cup."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/tennis/51943034
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Thoughts with all those around the World right now. Sport will rise again in time but for now it’s about everyone staying safe and finding a way through. Medically and economically we are being challenged more than our generation has ever been before but we will find a way. &#55357;&#56911;&#55356;&#57340;</p>— Brendon McCullum (@Bazmccullum) <a href="https://twitter.com/Bazmccullum/status/1240210498101972994?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 18, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
BREAKING: English football suspended until at least April 30th, the Premier League, EFL and FA have confirmed
 
English football will be suspended until at least 30 April because of the continued spread of coronavirus.

All games in England's Premier League, EFL, Women's Super League and Women's Championship, and all fixtures in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, are currently postponed.
 
England manager Gareth Southgate says "we shouldn't spend another moment" thinking about the postponement of Euro 2020 and called for all England fans to "look out for each other".

This summer's finals have been put back a year because of the coronavirus outbreak, while the Three Lions were due to play friendlies against Italy and Denmark next week.

Southgate - who says that all of his current players can still play in the finals next year - has written an open letter to England fans, which is reproduced in full below.

Dear England fans,

As we would have been gathering our squad for March fixtures this weekend, it felt an appropriate moment to write a message to all of our supporters.

For everyone in our country, the primary focus of the present - and the coming months - is undoubtedly to look after our families, support our communities and work together to come through what is clearly the most extreme test that we've faced collectively in decades.

On behalf of all the team and staff, I would like to take this opportunity to send our sympathies to those who have lost loved ones already. Our thoughts are with you and with those who sadly will suffer similarly in the coming period.

In the way you've all come together to support our team, we must now work together to combat a virus that is causing physical and emotional issues to so many. So, please continue to follow the guidelines for hygiene and also the sensible precautions put in place to control the spread of the virus in order to protect those most vulnerable to its impact.

That responsibility lies with us all.

We are also conscious of the economic uncertainty affecting so many businesses and, consequently, virtually every family. Coupled with the unique challenges of self-isolation, the loss of routine to normal working and social life, we face real challenges to our mental wellbeing. Our children may feel anxious with uncertainty. It's not normal for any of us and it's going to challenge us all.

Look out for each other. Please don't suffer alone, and remember that our great country has come through these enormous challenges before - and, together, we will do so again.

We were due to play next week and to represent you all this summer, but now is clearly not the moment for us to take centre stage. The heroes will be the men and women who continue working tirelessly in our hospitals and medical centres to look after our friends and families. They won't receive the individual acclaim, but we all know their importance is beyond anything we do on the pitch.

When we play again as an England team, it will be at a time when not only our country but the rest of the world as well is on the road to recovery. Hopefully we will be closer to each other than ever, and ready for the beautiful distraction that football can bring.

To play in a European Championship next summer will still be possible for all of our squad and so we shouldn't spend another moment thinking about the postponement of the competition.

I feel sure that, when that moment comes, I will never have been prouder to be the leader.

Again on behalf of us all, I wish you and your families strength and love to thrive through the challenges ahead.

Best wishes,

Gareth.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/51973507
 
The Welsh Rugby Union has cancelled all league and cup competitions for the rest of the season amid the coronavirus pandemic.
 
It was the dream scenario for David Silva at the end of his trophy-filled, decade-long career at Manchester City.

Picture it: “El Mago” (the Magician), as fans fondly refer to perhaps the club’s greatest player, holding aloft the Champions League trophy — the big piece of silverware to elude him and his team — after his final game for City. What a way to go.

The rapidly spreading coronavirus might have put an end to those hopes.

Silva is among dozens of English Premier League players, and hundreds of players across Europe, whose contracts are due to expire at the end of this season. June 30, to be specific.

Except the suspension of the Premier League — and almost every other domestic league across the globe — and the uncertainty over when they will resume means there’s no knowing when the 2019-20 soccer season will actually end. It might not even be in 2020.

It means one of the most significant questions during’s soccer’s current paralysis is how the sport deals with players whose contracts are about to expire.

Will Silva, for example, even be at City when this season ends, if it ever does?

“As with every section of society, there is a sense of great uncertainty about what’s to come,” said James Skelland, a football agent at YMU Sport.

As part of its effort to find some solutions amid a virus outbreak that has plunged soccer into one of its biggest crises, FIFA is creating a working group to assess any “necessary amendments or temporary dispensations” to rules regarding the status of players and the transfer window which reopens on July 1.

Any emergency measures will aim “to protect contracts for both players and clubs and adjusting player registration periods,” FIFA said.

On Tuesday, soon after pushing back the European Championship from mid-2020 to mid-2021, UEFA — European soccer’s leadership — announced a working group to examine the fallout of soccer’s current suspension. Player contracts will surely be among the topics.

The talks will not be straightforward, with Skelland describing it as a “very complicated situation.”

Most soccer seasons in Europe run from July 1 to June 30. Some northern countries have leagues run from April into November to avoid severe winter weather.

Employment agreements between players and clubs (including loans), broadcasting agreements and sponsorship contracts follow those dates. This is the first time the season is likely to over-run.

UEFA expressed its commitment to completing the domestic and European club competitions (the Champions League and the Europa League) by June 30. That target is based mostly on hope, with soccer at the mercy of an invisible threat that has infected more than 218,000 people worldwide and killed more than 8,800.

The issue facing clubs is what to do with players whose contracts expire on June 30, or even earlier in the case of loan signings.

Sven Demeulemeester, the founder of Belgium-based sports law firm Atfield, said players hold the the power.

“Players who are not under contract for the 2020-2021 season automatically become a free agent as per July 1, 2020,” Demeulemeester told The Associated Press, adding that “additional regulatory and legal changes may be necessary” if clubs want to extend some player contracts by a few days, weeks or months.

“In most countries, player contracts are employment contracts and employment law remains essentially a national matter. Extending the duration of player contracts through (national-level) collective bargaining is not that obvious. Individual consent will therefore in my opinion be the likely route and free agents will be likely to refuse to stay on after June 30,” the lawyer said, noting any changes agreed by a player “will likely come at a cost.”

In Silva’s case, he might be happy to stay on at City. The 34-year-old Spanish playmaker has yet to sign for another club and, in the twilight of his career, the prospect of potentially winning the Champions League in his only season as the team’s captain is enticing.

But what about players keen to leave their clubs? Or those who already signed for another team, like Morocco winger Hakim Ziyech who is due to join Chelsea from Ajax on July 1?

“If a player picks up a severe injury during the period of extension,” Demeulemeester said, “he might jeopardize a future transfer and might even end up unemployed as soon as the period of extension is over.”

For that reason, he added, “one can imagine that a player with no new contract yet does not want to prolong his contract for a few days. On the other hand, if a player already signed with a new club, as is the case for Ziyech, his new club will want to have a say as well.”

The top official at the global players’ union FIFPro, secretary general Jonas Baer-Hoffmann, said there’s a hope for a “collective extension of a short period” which then leads to a free agency.

“With a little bit of common sense and cooperation from everybody, this should be resolvable,” Baer-Hoffmann said.

“What we want to prevent is (a situation in) which players the clubs like get extended, and those they don’t like, don’t (get a contract extension).”

FIFPro currently has good relations with FIFA and UEFA, but any consensus agreed by international officials might not be observed at the local level — by clubs, players or their agents.

The most influential agents in Europe are currently furious with FIFA and trying to resist rules that would cap their commissions from player salaries and transfer fees.

Hundreds of clubs worldwide also face a cash-flow crisis while there is no match-day revenue during soccer’s near-total shutdown. It would surprise few if some clubs far from the Champions League and Premier League spotlight refused to pay players beyond their contract dates.

The multi-billion dollar soccer industry is unsure when it will restart. It likely faces more uncertainty even when it does.

SELECTED PLAYERS OUT OF CONTRACT AT END OF SEASON

England: Willian, Pedro Rodriguez, Olivier Giroud (Chelsea); David Silva, Claudio Bravo (Manchester City); Odion Ighalo (on loan at Manchester United from Shanghai Shenhua); Jan Vertonghen (Tottenham); Dani Ceballos (on loan at Arsenal from Real Madrid).

Italy: Zlatan Ibrahimovic (short-term deal at AC Milan)

France: Mauro Icardi (loan from Inter Milan), Edinson Cavani, Thiago Silva, Thomas Meunier, Layvin Kurzawa (all Paris Saint-Germain)

Germany: Mario Götze (Borussia Dortmund), Charles Aranguiz (Bayer Leverkusen).

Spain: Alphonse Areola (on loan at Real Madrid from PSG)

https://indianexpress.com/article/s...cts-coronavirus-david-silva-contract-6323887/
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Hi everyone, I just wanted just to inform you that we have received the results for the Covid-19 test and both Oriana and I have tested positive. Luckily we are in perfect conditions. Thanks for your messages.</p>— Paulo Dybala (@PauDybala_JR) <a href="https://twitter.com/PauDybala_JR/status/1241424116734988289?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 21, 2020</a></blockquote>
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Marouane Fellaini has been diagnosed with coronavirus following his return to China, the Belgian's Chinese Super League club Shandong Luneng announced on Sunday.
 
The Azerbaijan Grand Prix is the latest Formula 1 race to be postponed. The street race in Azerbaijan's capital Baku was set to take place on 7 June.

It is the eighth race to be called off at the start of the 2020 World Championship season. The Canadian Grand Prix, on 14 June, is the first race on the schedule that has not been postponed.
 
The finals of European football's biggest club competitions - the Champions League and Europa League tournaments - have been postponed because of the coronavirus outbreak, governing body Uefa has announced.

The men's and women's Champions League finals, plus the men's Europa League final, were all due to be played in May. No decision has yet been made on rearranged dates.

The Spanish domestic season has also been suspended until the government says it can be resumed without creating a health risk.

Spain has recorded 2,182 deaths from coronavirus, the government announced earlier. The number of cases registered there has increased from 28,572 on Sunday to 33,089.
 
IOC member says 2020 Tokyo Olympics will be postponed because of coronavirus pandemic

Veteran International Olympic Committee member Dick Pound told USA TODAY Sports on Monday afternoon that the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games are going to be postponed amid the coronavirus pandemic.

“On the basis of the information the IOC has, postponement has been decided,” Pound said in a phone interview. “The parameters going forward have not been determined, but the games are not going to start on July 24, that much I know.”

Pound, a Canadian who has been one of the most influential members of the IOC for decades, said the games will likely be moved to 2021, with the details to be worked out in the next four weeks. He said he expects the IOC to announce its next steps soon.

“It will come in stages,” said Pound, 78, the longest-serving IOC member. “We will postpone this and begin to deal with all the ramifications of moving this, which are immense.”

Neither the IOC nor the Tokyo 2020 organizing committee had announced a decision to postpone as of Monday afternoon.

When informed of Pound's comments and asked for an IOC response, spokesman Mark Adams said, "It is the right of every IOC member to interpret the decision of the IOC executive board which was announced (Sunday)."

In that announcement Sunday, IOC president Thomas Bach indicated, for the first time, that postponing the Tokyo Games would be a possibility.

In a letter to the athlete community, he wrote that the IOC would begin exploring alternate ways to stage the games, including postponement, and plan to reach a decision within the next four weeks. He emphasized that the IOC has ruled out canceling the games, a stance that was reiterated by key Japanese officials – including Prime Minister Shinzo Abe – on Monday.

Representatives of the Tokyo 2020 organizing committee did not immediately reply to an email from USA TODAY Sports seeking a response to Pound's comments.

The Olympics would be the latest – and, by far, most significant – sporting event to date to fall victim to the coronavirus, which was first identified in Wuhan, China, in December. Also known as COVID-19, the disease rapidly spread throughout China and across the world in subsequent months, infecting hundreds of thousands of people and causing major disruptions to daily life in numerous countries.

The spread of the coronavirus also has interrupted Olympic qualification procedures and severely affected training regimens, prompting athletes and sports governing bodies around the world to call for the games' postponement.

"I would have real moral objections, if the situation was the same as it was today, to competing,” swimmer and five-time Olympic gold medalist Nathan Adrian told USA TODAY Sports on Friday.

Pressure mounted over the weekend as World Athletics, the international federation that oversees track and field, publicly called for the games to be postponed. The Canadian Olympic and Paralympic Committees then took matters to another level Sunday night by announcing they will not send a delegation of athletes to the Tokyo Games unless they were postponed.

Within the next 12 hours, Australia's Olympic Committee released a similar but more ambiguous statement, explaining that its executive board had agreed that "an Australian team could not be assembled in the changing circumstances at home and abroad." And the German Olympic Committee joined its counterparts in Brazil and Norway, among other countries, in publicly urging the IOC to postpone the games.

The decision to postpone, when finalized and announced by the IOC, will mark a significant milestone. It would the first time the Olympics have been suspended, though the games have been canceled in times of war.

The 1916 Summer Games were canceled because of World War I, as were the Summer and Winter Games in 1940 and 1944 because of World War II. Boycotts also caused serious complications for the games in 1976, 1980 and 1984. But in each case, the event itself went on as scheduled.

"I’ve had so many calls with athletes who have been in tears trying to train for their ultimate dream but not wanting to jeopardize their health," American hurdler Lolo Jones wrote on Twitter after Pound's comments. "This was the right thing to do. May the world heal."

https://eu.usatoday.com/story/sport...-postponed-dick-pound-coronavirus/2899848001/
 
The footballing world has come to a standstill but many have been responding to the coronavirus crisis with good deeds - including Jose Mourinho, who has been volunteering in London.

The Tottenham Hotspur manager worked alongside Age UK and Love Your DoorStep in Enfield to prepare food parcels and other items for delivery to the more vulnerable members of the community.

"I am here to help Age UK Enfield, Love Your DoorStep Enfield and of course you can donate food, money or be a volunteer," Mourinho said in a video posted by Love Your DoorStep's Twitter account.

The charity has been delivering essential goods to elderly members of society who have been advised to stay in quarantine for the next 12 weeks.

And Age UK have launched a £10m emergency coronavirus appeal.

The funds they raise will help support Age UK's national telephone friendship and advice lines, as well as front-line local Age UK support, including food packages.

Elsewhere, Manchester United midfielder Juan Mata offered to practice - once the pandemic eases - with a self-isolating boy from Dublin, whose innovative method of solo goalkeeping practice went viral.

"One day, if he wants, and when all this is over, I would like to practice my freeckicks [sic] with him on goal! What do you think?" wrote Mata.

Goalkeeping legend Peter Schmeichel also shared the video and added: "Nothing, not even an evil virus like the CONVID-19 [sic] should stop a talented goalkeeper from working on getting better. Well done young man."

Crystal Palace forward Wilfried Zaha - who co-owns ZO Properties - offered to open 50 homes in London to NHS staff who are working around the clock.

Gary Neville also announced that the two hotels he part-owns with former Manchester United team-mate Ryan Giggs will be made available free of charge to NHS workers.

Manchester United striker Marcus Rashford partnered with the charity FareShare, which redistributes surplus food to frontline charities around the country, as schools closed on Friday.

"I wanted to understand the scale of the problem and how we can reach vulnerable children," he tweeted. "It's not just schools. It's community centres, breakfast clubs, etc that provide the only meal many kids get each day. No child should have to worry where their next meal is coming from."

And Tottenham defender Toby Alderweireld vowed to buy electronic tablets for hospitals and nursing homes so those with COVID-19 can stay in touch with family members.

"The virus creates many needs, especially the lack of personal contact," he said in a video message. "The people who are sick can't see their friends and family.

"My plan is to buy dozens of tablets to give to the hospitals and nursing homes so people can video chat with their loved ones and friends to get through this tough period."

https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...s-football-stars-respond-to-outbreak-11962653
 
The Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games could be formally postponed as early as today, BBC Sport understands.

An International Olympic Committee (IOC) spokesperson said: “The IOC is discussing with the Japanese government, the Tokyo 2020 Organising Committee and the IOC Executive Board about the scenario planning including the postponement of the Games and will communicate in due course.”

On Monday night, the United States Olympic Committee said it was "more clear than ever" the Games are on "a path to postponement".
The Games are scheduled to start on 24 July.
 
The 2020 Tokyo Paralympic Games have also been postponed by a year because of the global coronavirus pandemic.

The International Paralympic Committee (IPC) says it gave its full support to the decision taken by the Japanese government and International Olympic Committe (IOC).

The Paralympics were due to take place between 25 August and 6 September.

"The health and well-being of human life must always be our number one priority and staging a sport event of any kind during this pandemic is simply not possible," said IPC President Andrew Parsons.

As with the Olympics, the Paralympics must be held no later than the summer of 2021.
 
Tennis star Roger Federer is the latest celebrity to donate money towards coronavirus causes.

The 38-year-old, considered one of the greatest sportspeople of all time, and his wife Mirka, have donated 1m swiss francs (about £861,000) to “vulnerable families in Switzerland”.

“Nobody should be left behind,” the 20-time Grand Slam winner wrote on Instagram. “Our contribution is just a start. We hope that others might join in supporting more families in need. Together we can overcome this crisis! Stay healthy!”

Married actors Blake Lively and Ryan Reynonds previously gave $1m to US and Canadian foodbanks.

Rihanna’s Clara Lionel Foundation donated $5m to various charities to help with medical supplies, equipment and access to food.
 
Premier League stars including Arsenal's Hector Bellerin and Manchester United's Aaron Wan-Bissaka have launched #FootballUnited - a new initiative with the aim of raising £100,000 to help local communities through the coronavirus pandemic.

Bellerin and Wan-Bissaka are joined by Chelsea's Reece James, Crystal Palace winger Andros Townsend, and England striker Callum Wilson in pledging their support.

Proceeds donated to #FootballUnited will be collected by the National Emergencies Trust and used to support elderly and vulnerable people affected by COVID-19.

The players already driving forward this campaign want fellow professionals across the nation to follow suit and show their support for #FootballUnited.

With players tagging social media campaign posts with the words #FootballUnited, it is hoped fellow team-mates and football figures will lend their support and drive donations to help communities across the UK recover from the impact of the pandemic.

The campaign is being co-ordinated by Unique Sports Management, after the idea was raised by several of its clients.

A joint statement on behalf of the players said: "Football has such a big role to play in communities and our clubs are a huge part of people's lives.

"Without football, we want to put our rivalries aside and show togetherness at such a critical moment for the country.

"These are uncertain times for communities, but as players we want to show some recognition for the incredible work that is being done for the most vulnerable.

"There are so many people at home who are afraid, alone and without full-time care.

"With the nation's help, we can show our support to the many volunteers and organisations who need funds to make sure vital food and medicine supplies will continue to be delivered during the crisis.

"As players we would love nothing more than to be out there playing in front of packed stadiums again, but that can wait - the most important thing right now is the future of the country and #FootballUnited is our way of showing some community spirit."

Marlon Fleischman, managing director at Unique Sports Management, said: "At such an unprecedented time, we are proud to support our players striving to make positive change through #FootballUnited.

"Now is the time for the football community to show solidarity and work together to help those who need urgent help, resources and care.

"Working alongside the National Emergencies Trust, we hope that the #FootballUnited campaign will generate vital funds to reach those local communities and charities at the time when they need it most".

https://www.skysports.com/football/...ars-launch-footballunited-to-help-communities
 
Former Australia cricketer Shane Warne and current limited-overs captain Aaron Finch slammed Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison after his ‘confusing’ national address regarding Coronavirus threat recently. More than 405,000 people have been infected by the virus while in excess of 15,000 people have lost their lives worldwide and these figures keep growing with every passing day.

In his address to the people of Australia, PM Morrison reportedly said contradictory things like schools will remain open but funerals can’t have a gathering of more than 10 people.

Warne took to social media to call out the PM and he wrote: “Listening to the PM like everyone here in Australia and what I understood was, ‘It’s essential, unless it’s not. Then it’s essentially not essential. I can’t be clearer’. Plus people can buy a new shirt at a shopping centre? ***? PM just had a shocker. Surely should be in lockdown now.”

Warne wasn’t the only one from cricket fraternity to express his anguish as Finch also took to social media to slam the PM’s unclear presser and he wrote: “I’m more bloody confused now that I was before the PM’s press conference!!” Ps I know it’s impossible to please everyone as PM at the moment, but surely clear rules and lockdown for Australia as of NOW is the only decision - end of. Let’s learn from the mistakes other countries have made. Health has to be the most important thing for everyone !

The entire sporting calender of the world has been ruined due the coronavirus pandemic, in a year when several multi-national events were scheduled to take place.

All bilateral cricket series have been called off while national T20 leagues have also been it. The start of Indian Premier League was pushed back to April 15 from March 29, however, it remains unlikely that it will start on that particular day.

Other sporting event likes Euro 2020 and Olympics 2020 have also been postponed till next year due to the massive threat posed by Covid-19.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/cric...-19-presser/story-Os5pg1imWRq8XSkdSkH1HN.html
 
The All England Club says a decision regarding this year's Wimbledon will be made next week.

In a statement on Wednesday, the club said postponement and cancellation of the event, scheduled between 29 June-12 July, because of the impact of coronavirus were possible outcomes.

Playing behind closed doors has been formally ruled out.

Earlier this month, the French Open, due to have begun in May, was rescheduled to 20 September-4 October.

The ATP and WTA Tours were already off until 27 April and 2 May respectively and last week that suspension was extended until 7 June.

The club's sites at the All England Club, Wimbledon Park Golf Club and Raynes Park are currently closed with physical operations reduced to a minimum to maintain the grass courts and the security of the sites.

Postponing the only Grand Slam grass court event until later in the year "is not without significant risk and difficulty" the statement added.

Chief executive Richard Lewis said: "The unprecedented challenge presented by the Covid-19 crisis continues to affect our way of life in ways that we could not have imagined, and our thoughts are with all those affected in the UK and around the world.

"The single most important consideration is one of public health, and we are determined to act responsibly through the decisions we make.

"We are working hard to bring certainty to our plans for 2020 and have convened an emergency meeting of the main board for next week, at which a decision will be made."

When the All England Club board meets next week, they will almost certainly conclude it is just not feasible to stage The Championships in 2020.

Now playing behind closed doors has been formally ruled out, there seems little prospect of Wimbledon being able, or allowed, to welcome 40,000 people on site every day. An event of this nature also puts inevitable further strain on the health system and the police.

Work to build up the site in readiness for the fortnight is due to begin at the end of next month, and you cannot do that without significant numbers of people on site.

A gap has opened up in the schedule with the postponement of the Tokyo Olympics, but a three-week delay is unlikely to make much of a difference.

And because of the surface, it is just not practical to follow the French Open's lead and try and stage The Championships in September.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/tennis/52042887
 
The Rugby Football Union is braced for lost revenue of up to £50m over the next 18 months as a result of the coronavirus outbreak.

Chief executive Bill Sweeney says the closure of Twickenham during the pandemic will have a "significant impact on revenues".

The RFU has also provided a relief package of £7m to help struggling community clubs, mainly through loans.

Sweeney and other executives will also be taking a pay cut of more than 25%.

"The RFU had budgeted for a loss-making year within a four-year cycle due to the costs of the 2019 Rugby World Cup campaign and hosting only two home Six Nations games," Sweeney said in a statement.

"The loss will now be considerably more as we face challenges similar to businesses across the country.

"The RFU's biggest asset is also a major cost and the closure of Twickenham Stadium has a significant impact on the revenues we can generate to reinvest back into the game.

"In that sense we are like every other club in the Union, when we do not stage matches and events we do not generate revenue. Based on our planning assumption we estimate RFU revenue losses over the next 18 months to be approximately £45-50m and have a firm plan in place to mitigate this.

"The RFU executive team will be taking a cut in remuneration in excess of 25%. In addition, combined board fees will be reduced by 75%."

The pay cuts outlined do not apply to head coach Eddie Jones, who is believed to be the highest-paid individual at the organisation.

However, it is understood that the RFU is looking into measures which could involve Jones and members of his coaching staff taking a reduction in salary.

Sweeney's statement also said an update about completing the 2019-20 season would be made by mid-April.

"We are managing in the unknown," he said. "We have modelled three potential scenarios and are working on an assumption based on a medium-term impact with a view to a return to rugby in the autumn.

"We will continue to monitor against this assumption and review and revise planning where necessary."

Sweeney added that the RFU are "discussing with government and the NHS the role the RFU and Twickenham Stadium can play in providing volunteers as well as support for the NHS including accommodation, parking and meal provisioning".

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/52041674
 
Conor McGregor has pledged one million euros worth of personal protective equipment for hospitals in Ireland.

In a private twitter exchange with Irish Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe, published by McGregor, the UFC star said he planned to buy the equipment on Wednesday before distributing it around hospitals in Dublin.

It comes a day after the Dublin native, 31, called for the government to fight back against the coronavirus by introducing an immediate lockdown.

McGregor also repeated his calls for all construction sites to be closed.

"Today I am purchasing myself, one million euros worth of personal protective equipment to be deployed to all the fighting hospitals in the region," he said in a lengthy response to Minister Donohue.

It appears that the minister initiated the conversation with McGregor after the fighter's passionate video on Tuesday, and asked him to convey the importance of social distancing to his considerable social media following.

After Tuesday's figures were reported, the number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the Republic of Ireland stood at 1,329.

McGregor indicated that the equipment he purchased would be sent to hospitals in Ireland's most populous province Leinster.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/mixed-martial-arts/52040615
 
The Indy 500 - one of the biggest motorsport races in the world - has become the latest major sporting event to be postponed.

The American race will now take place on 23 August instead of 24 May because of the coronavirus.
 
People should be "emotionally more open" after the coronavirus pandemic, says Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta following his recovery.

Arteta, 38, tested positive for the virus on 12 March but has since recovered after self-isolating.

"We are in a world here where everything is social media, everything is a WhatsApp text," the Spaniard said.

"But how important is touching each other, feeling each other and hugging each other?

"I miss that with a lot of the people I love.

"We have to be emotionally more open. We have to tell each other what we are feeling."

Arteta reported feeling unwell after it was confirmed Evangelos Marinakis - the owner of Greek side Olympiakos, who played Arsenal in the Europa League in February - had coronavirus on 10 March.

On Thursday Arteta said he was feeling "completely recovered" and urged people to follow the government's advice on staying at home.

"It's one virus that is putting the world aside and it's transforming everything that we prioritise in life. So we have to take that lesson," he told the Arsenal website.

"We cannot just in two or three months' time - if we are able to get over this quickly - forget about this, because it's so important."

Arsenal players were due to report for training earlier this week after competing a two-week isolation period, but their return has been postponed.

Arteta said his main concern was his three children after his wife and their nanny contracted the virus.

Arteta self-isolated in a room and a bathroom for two or three days but his wife fell ill shortly afterwards.

"I am a very positive person and I try to take the moment to say OK, what can we take from this?" he said.

"I haven't had the opportunity to wake up with my kids and dedicate my time and listen to them.

"We are in the household together and we are really enjoying those moments as well."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/52057533
 
The 2020 NFL draft is to go ahead as scheduled next month but players, fans and media will not be present because of the coronavirus pandemic.

It will be held from 23-25 April in a television studio, with players interviewed via video conference.

The draft was due to take place in Las Vegas and the NFL had already cancelled all public events.

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said it "can serve a very positive purpose for our clubs, our fans, and the country".

He added: "There is no assurance that we can select a different date and be confident that conditions will be significantly more favourable than they are today."

The NFL draft is one of the biggest events in the United States' sporting calendar, with all 32 teams recruiting talent from the American collegiate system amid wall-to-wall media coverage.

About 500,000 fans attended last year's draft in Nashville.

In a memo sent to franchises, Goodell said: "We will not be bringing prospects and their families to the draft, and the draft itself will be conducted and televised in a way that reflects current conditions.

"All clubs should now be doing the necessary planning to conduct draft operations in a location outside of your facility, with a limited number of people present, and with sufficient technology resources to allow you to communicate internally, with other clubs, and with draft headquarters."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/american-football/52061707
 
Over in America the National Football League say that in collaboration with the National Football League Players Association, clubs, owners and players, more than $35 million (£28m) has been donated to relief efforts.

The 10 organizations receiving donations are: American Red Cross, Bob Woodruff Foundation, Boys & Girls Clubs of America, CDC Foundation, GENYOUth Foundation, Meals on Wheels America, Salvation Army, Team Rubicon, United Way and Wounded Warrior Project.

"We have all been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Now more than ever, we need to unify to stay home and stay strong," said NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell.

"The NFL will continue to find ways to give our support so we can get through this time of uncertainty together."

==

World number one Novak Djokovic and wife Jelena are donating one million euros to buy medical equipment to fight the coronavirus in Serbia.

Djokovic will use family contacts to buy equipment from China and Europe.
 
India cricketing legend Sachin Tendulkar on Friday donated Rs 50 lakh to tackle the coronavirus pandemic in the country, which has claimed 17 lives so far in India, news agency PTI reported. As per the report, Tendulkar’s donation to the cause is the largest contribution made by any Indian leading sports personalities, some of whom have already pledged their salaries, while others have donated medical equipment to combat the outbreak, which has already claimed nearly 25,000 lives all over the world.

“Sachin Tendulkar decided to contribute Rs 25 lakh each to Prime Minister’s Relief Fund and Chief Minister’s Relief Fund in his bid to join the fight against COVID-19. It was his decision that he wanted to contribute to both funds,” a source closed to the development was quoted as saying by the news agency.

Among other prominent cricketers, the Pathan brothers -- Irfan and Yusuf -- donated 4000 face masks to Baroda police and health department while Mahendra Singh Dhoni, through a Pune based NGO, made a contribution of Rs 1 lakh. BCCI President Sourav Ganguly also announced pledged to donate rice worth Rs 50 lakh for the underprivileged.

Among other athletes, wrestler Bajrang Punia and sprinter Hima Das have announced that they will donate their salaries in the battle against the coroanvirus which has led to a 21-day national lockdown.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/cric...ht-covid-19/story-INcnOECerw8uai9ZC6LNzI.html
 
Jürgen Klopp has said he was moved to tears by footage of NHS staff singing You’ll Never Walk Alone and hopes the response to the coronavirus pandemic will generate greater solidarity across the world.

The Liverpool manager has given his first full interview since the Premier League season was suspended on 13 March and said any problems he may have – such as when football may resume and Liverpool may win the league – are “embarrassing” compared with the global crisis.

He paid tribute to the frontline medical workers putting themselves at risk to treat the sick, many of whom have sung the Liverpool anthem while on duty.

Klopp said: “It’s extraordinary. I think yesterday I was sent a video of people in the hospital just outside the intensive care area and when they started singing You’ll Never Walk Alone I started crying immediately. It’s unbelievable. But it shows everything, these people not only work but they have such a good spirit.

“They are used to helping other people; we need to get used to it because usually we have our own problems and stuff. But it’s their job, they do it day in and day out. They bring themselves, if you want, in danger because they help ill, sick and seriously handicapped people, so I couldn’t admire them more and appreciate it more.”

Klopp insisted spirits remain high among his players and staff. He has watched the Taken trilogy “again” at home and tried to replicate Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain’s dance routine. “Not as bad as you probably think,” he claimed.

On a much more serious note, Klopp hopes there can be a lasting and positive legacy from the response to the pandemic. He said: “In the future, in 10, 20, 30, 40 years, if we look back and the conclusion is that this was the period when the world showed the biggest solidarity, the biggest love, the biggest friendship or whatever, that would be really great.

“So in the moment when you go through a phase or a period like this it’s not possible to see that, especially not for the people who are ill, but there will be a point in the future, a moment in the future when we look back and hopefully then we can see it like this. Because that’s the solution for it – we all have to be disciplined, we all have to work together, we all have to take care of each other and that’s the solution for this problem.”

Klopp, speaking to the club’s website, added: “There are so many people out there that have much bigger problems so it would feel really embarrassing to myself if I was to talk about my ‘problems’ – I have the problems every person in the world has in the moment. That’s the lesson we learn in this moment.

“Four or five weeks ago it looks like a lot of countries thought: ‘That’s our problem, that’s our problem, that’s our problem, we have a problem with them’ and stuff like this. Now nature shows us we are all the same and we have all the same problems in the same moment, and we have to work together on the solution. There is nothing good in that situation apart from maybe what we can learn from that.”

Liverpool hosted the last high-profile match in England before football was suspended when Atlético Madrid, and approximately 3,000 of their supporters, visited Anfield in the Champions League on 11 March. Klopp recalled: “We played the Bournemouth game on Saturday, we won it, then Sunday City lost, so the information for us was ‘two wins to go’. But then on Monday morning I woke up and heard about the situation in Madrid, that they would close the schools and universities from Wednesday, so it was really strange to prepare for that game to be honest.

“I usually don’t struggle with things around me, I can build barriers right and left when I prepare for a game, but in that moment it was really difficult. Wednesday we had the game, I loved the game, I loved what I saw from the boys, it was a really, really good performance other than the result – we didn’t score enough, we conceded too many, that’s all clear, but between these two main pieces of information it was a brilliant game!

https://www.theguardian.com/footbal...s-staff-sang-youll-never-walk-alone-liverpool
 
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Difficult decisions will have to be taken" to counter the financial impact of coronavirus on English football, say the Premier League, EFL and Professional Footballers' Association.

All games have been postponed until at least 30 April and will only resume "when it is safe and conditions allow".

A Premier League, EFL and PFA statement said their thoughts "continue to be with everyone affected by the virus".

"We have agreed to work together to arrive at shared solutions," it added.

Further meetings were set for next week "with a view to formulating a joint plan to deal with the difficult circumstances facing the leagues, their clubs, players, staff and fans".

Premier League clubs were already due to meet again on 3 April, when it is almost certain the current postponement of all matches until 30 April will be extended again.

That could take it past the official end of the EFL league season and towards the last round of Premier League fixtures, which was supposed to be on 17 May.

Players at some clubs across Europe - including Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund - have agreed to take temporary pay cuts.

While the fate of the Premier League and EFL seasons remains unclear, the FA has already cancelled all non-league campaigns in steps three to seven in the pyramid.

More than 30 clubs are willing to challenge that decision - meaning no promotion or relegation - which is yet to be ratified by the FA council.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/52070969
 
Juventus star Paulo Dybala revealed Friday how he "struggled to breathe" after contracting coronavirus which has killed over 9,000 people in Italy.

The Argentine international announced last Saturday he was one of three Juventus players to catch the virus along with Daniele Rugani and Blaise Matuidi, who both had no symptoms.

"I feel better now after some strong symptoms," the 26-year-old Dybala told JTV channel.

"A couple of days ago I was not well, I felt heavy and after five minutes of movement I had to stop because I was struggling to breathe.

"Now I can move and walk to start trying to train, because when I tried in the past few days I started to shake too much.

"I gasped for air and as a result I couldn't do anything, after five minutes I was already very tired, I felt the body heavy and my muscles hurt.

"Now I'm fine. My fiancée Oriana (Sabatini) has also overcome the symptoms."

Dybala has scored 13 goals in all competitions this season, including in league leader's Juventus's last game against Inter Milan before Serie A and all sport in Italy was suspended.

"The goal against Inter was the greatest emotion, (Aaron) Ramsey provided the perfect assist - it's a pity that there was no public," added Dybala.

https://www.afp.com/en/news/3955/i-...ala-reveals-coronavirus-nightmare-doc-1q85t73
 
Azam khan four time British open champion passed away in London at the age of 95 because of Coronavirus. He won the British open consecutively for four years between 1959 to 62. He was younger brother of Hashim khan and is regarded as one of the greatest players of all time
 
Conor McGregor wants Irish military to help ensure people stay at home

Former UFC champion Conor McGregor wants the Irish military to support the police to ensure the public complies with coronavirus measures.

The Irish mixed martial arts star also said the country's airports be closed immediately.

On Friday, the Irish government told people to stay at home for two weeks unless their work is essential or they need to buy food.

"I urge our government to utilise our defence forces," McGregor, 31, said.

"Our defence forces have been mentioned as a possibility in assisting our 15,000 available Gardai (Police) but only if necessary. However, it is necessary."

Dubliner McGregor said in a Facebook video that the military should assist the Irish police in "24-hour patrols".

"We cannot go by chance here," he said.

"Any less than full adherence to these newly put forth methods by any member of our society will not only be a mockery to what we are attempting to do - it would put the rest of our great nation in danger."

While many flights in and out of Ireland have been cancelled, airports remain open.

"Our airports must shut," said McGregor, adding that the only flights that should be permitted were for "essential medical equipment or to bring our medical staff abroad home to support us".

'Make your current location your home'

He also appealed to Irish people stranded abroad to make the current locations their home, saying: "You are doing your country an incredible deed by staying put."

McGregor's four-minute address concluded by calling on his compatriots to maintain fitness levels by indulging in "small-space exercise programmes" in their own homes.

"We must encourage home workouts and healthy immune-boosting nutritional plans," he said.

"We need meal plans and the necessary vitamins we should be taking to boost our immune systems."

On Tuesday, McGregor called for the government to introduce an immediate lockdown, and on Wednesday he pledged 1m euros worth of personal protective equipment for hospitals in Ireland.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/mixed-martial-arts/52076454
 
Azam khan four time British open champion passed away in London at the age of 95 because of Coronavirus. He won the British open consecutively for four years between 1959 to 62. He was younger brother of Hashim khan and is regarded as one of the greatest players of all time

The PCB is saddened with the news of four-time British Open squash champion Azam Khan's passing and offers its condolences to his family and friends.

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English golfer Tommy Fleetwood hopes September’s Ryder Cup can act as a “light at the end of the tunnel” for the world of sport following the coronavirus pandemic.

Golf majors the Masters and PGA Championship have already been postponed.

However, a decision is yet to be made on the Ryder Cup, which takes place every two years and will see a team from Europe take on the United States.

“I think there are certain events that would be an amazing torch for a turn in how the world is getting on and the Ryder Cup would be one of them that is like a shining light at the end of the tunnel,” Fleetwood, the world number 10, told BBC Radio 5 Live.

“The Ryder Cup is an event people dream about (playing) and sometimes it can only happen once.”

The Ryder Cup is scheduled to begin on 25 September at Whistling Straits, Wisconsin.
 
Juventus players and coaching staff have agreed to take a wage cut for the next four months amid the coronavirus pandemic.
 
Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin says the current football season could be lost if it cannot be restarted by the end of June.

Most leagues in Europe are suspended because of the coronavirus pandemic, with this summer's Euro 2020 tournament postponed for another year.

Ceferin says seasons could be finished behind closed doors.

"If we don't succeed in restarting, the season will probably be lost," the Slovenian said.

He told Italian newspaper La Repubblica: "There is a plan A, B and C.

"The three options are to start again in mid-May, in June or at the end of June.

"There is also the possibility of starting again at the beginning of the next [season], starting the following one later. We will see the best solution for leagues and clubs."

As it stands there are nine games to be completed by the majority of Premier League clubs, and up to 12 in the Football League.

All football in England is suspended until at least 30 April.

Ceferin says that playing remaining games behind closed doors would have to be an option across Europe.

"It's hard for me to imagine all the matches behind closed doors, but we still don't know whether we'll resume, with or without spectators," he said.

"If there was no alternative, it would be better to finish the championships."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/52079717
 
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COVID-19 takes huge toll on Australian sport | ABC News



Years of record broadcast deals, sky-rocketing salaries, and unprecedented growth, experts are now warning Australian sport might never be the same again.

The coronavirus has taken a huge toll on the industry with mass layoffs
 
Juventus' players and manager Maurizio Sarri have agreed to their pay being stopped for four months to save the club an estimated 90m euros (£80.7m) during the coronavirus pandemic.

All sport in Italy has been suspended until at least 3 April.

The Juve squad, which includes Portugal forward Cristiano Ronaldo and Wales midfielder Aaron Ramsey, will not be paid their full salaries in March, April, May and June.

They top Serie A by a point from Lazio.
 
Manchester: UK-born Pakistani boxer Amir Khan will donate PKR40million to Pakistan government for coronavirus (COVID-19) emergency fund.

Khan took to Instagram to announce his contribution and also announced to give his Islamabad Boxing Academy to the government as a quarantine for the coronavirus patients.

“I want to play my role in saving lives,” Amir Khan said. ” There is a room of placing 100 beds and if boxing ring can be moved so it can cover more space,” he added.

Earlier, Amir has offered his 60,000 square foot property to National Health Service (NHS) to help with the bed crisis amid the coronavirus epidemic in Boston.

“I am aware of how difficult it is for the public to get a hospital bed in this tragic time. I am prepared to give my 60,000 square foot 4 story building which is due to be a wedding hall and retail outlet to the NHS to help people affected by the coronavirus. please keep safe.” he wrote on Twitter.

It must be noted here that the entire world is suffering through coronavirus. Several countries have locked down their cities completely to avoid further spread of this disease. Popular sports events around the world have also been postponed for an indefinite period.

https://arysports.tv/amir-khan-donate-rs40mn-pakistan/
 
Former world champion Amir Khan has continued his battle against the coronavirus.

The boxer has promised to donate Rs40 million (over $534,000) for the welfare of the poor during the lockdown in Pakistan.

Khan has also offered to use his boxing academy in Islamabad as a quarantine center. He added that the quarantined patients need to be kept separately so the gymnasium in his boxing academy will serve the purpose.

“Amir Khan Foundation will make sure to distribute ration and other necessary things among the poor,” said Khan. “I want to help the government of Pakistan as they assist the patients affected by coronavirus."

It had previously been reported that Khan offered his 60,000 square feet wedding venue for use to Britain’s National Health Service, as there are concerns over bed shortages in the UK.

“I am aware of how difficult it is for the public to get a hospital bed in this tragic time. I am prepared to give my 60,000 square foot 4 story building which is due to be a wedding hall and retail outlet to the NHS to help people affected by the coronavirus,” Khan stated.

Khan (34-5, 21 KOs) has been out of the ring since last July, when he easily stopped late replacement Billy Dib in Jeddah. He planned to fight twice in 2020, but due to the ongoing pandemic his plans are on hold until the situation becomes clearer.

https://www.boxingscene.com/amir-khan-makes-big-donation-pakistan-coronavirus-battle--147919
 
Reports in Japanese media today suggest the Tokyo Olympics organisers are eyeing next July as a start date for the postponed Games.

Tokyo 2020 was scheduled to open on 24 July this year, with the Paralympics due to start on 25 August, but has been postponed because of the worldwide coronavirus pandemic - a decision unprecedented in peacetime.

Given the ongoing pandemic and need for preparation time, the most likely plan would be for the Games to begin on 23 July 2021, public broadcaster NHK said, citing sources within the organising panel.

Meanwhile, World Athletics president Lord Sebastian Coe says the decision to push back the Games has saved athletes from "mental turmoil", adding that sport had to "take a back seat".
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Shahid Afridi "This country has given me everything, so it is my duty that I help my people in their time of need and crisis" <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/COVID19?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#COVID19</a> <a href="https://t.co/uwLV8gIHIJ">pic.twitter.com/uwLV8gIHIJ</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1244250145077833728?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 29, 2020</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Shahid Afridi "I am grateful to all the people who've backed me. I got a message from my friend Harbhajan Singh who appreciated my efforts. These things motivate me because insaniyaat se bada kuch bhi nahi hai. All religions teach us to show humanity" <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/COVID19?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#COVID19</a> (via Sportstar)</p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1244250648432070658?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 29, 2020</a></blockquote>
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A Champions League game between Atalanta and Valencia is being singled out as of the main reasons why Bergamo (in Italy) turned into one of the epicenters of the coronavirus pandemic.

It was a “biological bomb” observed one respiratory specialist while Bergamo Mayor Giorgio Gori admitted that there was no way it could be stopped.

“We were mid-February so we didn’t have the circumstances of what was happening,” Gori said earlier this week during a Facebook live chat.

“If it’s true what they’re saying that the virus was already circulating in Europe in January, then it’s very probable that 40,000 Bergamaschi in the stands of San Siro, all together, exchanged the virus between them. As is possible that so many Bergamaschi that night got together in houses, bars to watch the match and did the same.

“Unfortunately, we couldn’t have known. No one knew the virus was already here. It was inevitable,” the mayor added.

Less than a week after the game, the first cases were reported in the province of Bergamo. Here is all you need to know about the fateful game-

When was the Atalanta vs Valencia match held?

The UEFA Champions League match (first-leg) between Atalanta (from Italy’s Serie A) and Valencia (from Spain’s La Liga) was held on February 19. Two days later the first case of community transmission of COVID-19 was confirmed. Atalanta won, 4-1.

Where was the Atalanta vs Valencia held?
The game was played at the iconic San Siro Stadium in Milan because Atalanta’s stadium in Bergamo failed to meet the standards set by UEFA.

How many people attended the Atalanta vs Valencia match?

The official attendance for the contest stands at 45,792 — a “home” record for Atalanta. It was the biggest game in Atalanta’s history and a third of Bergamo’s population made the 37-mile trip from Bergamo to Milan. Out of a population of 120,000 people, more than 40,000 went to the San Siro. The number of travelling fans stands at 2,500.

Why is this match being termed as a ‘biological bomb’?

As thousands of fans gathered in one arena without any prior warning the conditions for virus contagion were high. It is also reported that before the game, travelling fans freely roamed around Milan.

“I have heard a lot (of theories), I’ll say mine: Feb. 19, 40,000 Bergamaschi went to San Siro for Atalanta-Valencia,” Fabiano di Marco, the chief pneumologist at the hospital in Bergamo, told Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera. “In buses, cars, trains. A biological bomb, unfortunately.”

How many players were affected after the match?

Atalanta goalkeeper Marco Sportiello has tested positive for COVID-19. More than one-third of Valencia’s squad got infected. Valencia and Argentine defender Ezequiel Garay was the first La Liga league player to test positive for COVID-19. As far as fans are concerned it is yet to be ascertained as to how many of the 40,000 plus fans were affected by the virus.

By last week, Bergamo’s cemetery became so overwhelmed by the number of dead that military trucks began transporting bodies to a neighboring region for cremation. Italy remained the European country with the most cases, nearly 70,000, and with almost 7,000 deaths — the most worldwide and more than twice as many as China.

Spain is the next country in Europe with the most cases, nearly 48,000, and it has surpassed China in the number of deaths with more than 3,400.

https://indianexpress.com/article/s...ue-coronavirus-biological-bomb-italy-6337387/
 
Football is suspended in the UK and across most of world because of the coronavirus pandemic - but the game rolls on in Belarus.

The Belarusian Premier League rarely gets a mention in normal circumstances yet it is attracting attention from foreign fans as one of the few places around the globe - and the only place in Europe - where football is still being played.

On Saturday, there were six top-flight games in the eastern European country including the derby between FC Minsk and Dinamo Minsk watched by a capacity 3,000 crowd in Belarus' capital.

"It so happened that this derby was practically the only official football match on earth," read Dinamo's match report after their 3-2 defeat.

There have been fewer than 100 cases and no deaths from coronavirus in the former Soviet republic, which has a population of around 9.5m.

While most European countries are quarantining their citizens and shutting borders, the president of Belarus, Alexander Lukashenko, is not worried and has even suggested citizens drink vodka to combat the disease.

Belarus Football Federation spokesman Aleksandr Aleinik said precautions were being taken to allow games to go ahead.

"We've taken all the measures recommended by the Sports Ministry. All those who are in contact with fans are supplied with gloves," he added.

The decision to carry on has helped the Belarus Football Federation secure broadcasting deals with sports networks in 10 countries, including Russia, Israel and India, where fans have been left with nothing to watch.

Aleinik called it an "unprecedented situation".

Dinamo Minsk, seven-time Premier League winners, had a player sent off in the 58th minute as they lost to neighbours FC Minsk, who lead the table two games into the 2020 season.

Alexander Strok, a Dinamo Minsk spokesman, hopes the international attention will help the players "get more responsible" after two straight defeats.

Fans around the world have been posting messages about football in Belarus on social media with Starboard Wunmi tweeting: "You know you're obsessed with football when you're checking out the recent form of Slutsk and Dinamo Brest before their games kicks off in the Belarus Premier League."

David Watson added: "By the end of this everyone will have a team they support in Belarus."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/52084121
 
Lets be honest, next 6 months, we won't see any sports. Even if we do, it will be without crowds.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Anushka and I are pledging our support towards PM-CARES Fund & the Chief Minister's Relief Fund (Maharashtra). Our hearts are breaking looking at the suffering of so many & we hope our contribution, in some way, helps easing the pain of our fellow citizens <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/IndiaFightsCorona?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#IndiaFightsCorona</a></p>— Virat Kohli (@imVkohli) <a href="https://twitter.com/imVkohli/status/1244497077750489090?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 30, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Red Bull motorsport boss Helmut Marko said he advised his drivers to become infected with coronavirus while the season is in hiatus.

The 76-year-old said he had the idea to bring his Formula 1 drivers and juniors together in a camp, which "would be the ideal time for the infection to come".

"They are all strong young men in good health. That way they would be prepared whenever the action starts," he said.

The rest of Red Bull management were against the idea, which was abandoned.

"Let's put it this way: it has not been well received," Marko said.

The Austrian was speaking in an interview with his country’s television channel ORF, in which he added: "We have four Formula 1 drivers and eight or 10 juniors, and the idea was that we would organise a camp to mentally and physically bridge the dead time.”

The camp, he said, would have been organised to ensure the drivers were in the best possible physical shape once the season starts again.

The start of the F1 season has been thrown into disarray by the coronavirus, with the first eight races called off and the next events in Canada, France, Austria and Britain in June and July all under threat.

F1 boss Chase Carey has said he is aiming to reconfigure the season starting in the summer and trying to fit in as many as 15 to 18 races out of the original 22. The season could run into January next year to fit in as many events as possible.

Marko said: "If there is a racing season with 15 to 18 races, it will be very, very tough. There is no possibility to improve your fitness during the season. So it's actually ideal to use this time now."

Red Bull are the organisers of the Austrian Grand Prix, which is scheduled to be held on 5 July, but Marko said it was impossible to say at this stage whether the race could be held on that date.

"At the current time, you would have to be clairvoyant to make a correct forecast," he said. "I cannot judge whether 50,000 or 100,000 spectators would make a difference.

"What is critical, however, is that all European borders have to be reopened, because viewers from all over the world come to such an international event. And it is difficult to assess to what extent the virus can be brought under control in the individual countries."

Marko said he suspected he had already had the coronavirus in February, but that because of limited testing availability in Austria he could not be sure.

"I had what I thought was a severe cold and the symptoms would match corona," he said. "It was also something that I had never had in this intensity.

"I don't know if it was because the test options are currently very limited. But as soon as there is a chance, I would like to be tested afterwards."

And he said that Red Bull was contributing to the wider effort among UK-based F1 teams to produce ventilators to increase capacity in the NHS.

"Production has already started here, we are producing ventilators," he said. "This is the big plus of Formula 1, that you can react to the greatest technological challenges in the shortest possible time and also have the necessary speed in production.

"We have been on the so-called early summer break since last Friday, but the production of those parts that are made for the British government continues during the break."

Marko said that if current plans for the season go ahead, for Red Bull, the loss of revenue from fewer races was not that big a blow as they would save more money by running the cars less.

"Reduced costs due to fewer races are significantly lower than our losses in revenue," he said. "Our material orders - these are all special spare parts - have already been made every year, as have many hotel bookings.

"[F1 owner] Liberty expects a loss of $200-300m (£161-242m) in revenue, and this is also transferred to the teams in a quota. That is why we decided to take these austerity measures to make up for this loss of revenue."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/formula1/52091905
 
Players at Barcelona have agreed to take a 70% pay cut during the coronavirus pandemic and make additional contributions to ensure non-sporting staff receive full wages.

"We, as players, are always here to help the the club when they ask," said captain Lionel Messi.

Barcelona's board of directors, members of its professional sports teams and most of the basketball team have also agreed to reduce their salaries.

There have been no games in Spain's La Liga since 10 March. Spain's national death toll stands at 7,340, making it the worst-affected country in the world behind Italy.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I will be donating pkr one million to the Prime Minister relief fund for COVID19. In these testing times we should all play our part in what ever capacity.. May Allah forgive us and protect everyone Ameen</p>— Azhar Ali (@AzharAli_) <a href="https://twitter.com/AzharAli_/status/1244665899849854979?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 30, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
UEFA will hold a videoconference on Wednesday this week with its 55 member federations as part of discussions on the potential rescheduling of matches postponed due to the coronavirus crisis, European football's governing body announced on Monday.

The meeting will see UEFA share an update on the progress made by the two working groups that were created two weeks ago in response to the crisis caused by the pandemic and following the decision to postpone the European Championship by a year.

"The meeting will look at developments across all UEFA national team and club competitions, as well as discussing progress at FIFA and European level on matters such as player contracts and the transfer system," UEFA said in a statement.

UEFA previously stated their wish to finish the current season by June 30, the date when many players' contracts expire.

Carrying the season on beyond that date runs the risk of clubs losing their out-of-contract players before matches have been completed, unless a solution can be found.

However, UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin told Italian daily La Repubblica at the weekend that all options were under consideration in an effort to salvage the season, including starting again "in mid-May, in June or even late June".

The impact of the pandemic on Europe has forced UEFA to put Euro 2020 back 12 months and suspend all club competitions until further notice. The Champions League and Europa League have both been frozen at the last-16 stage.

UEFA's working group features three of its own members along with three from the European Club Association, one from the European Leagues body representing nearly a thousand clubs in 29 countries, one representative from La Liga in Spain and one from the English Premier League.

World football's governing body FIFA has also set up a working group to deal with the consequences of the pandemic, including on players' contracts and transfers and to deal with the economic impact on the game.

https://www.afp.com/en/news/824/uef...ravaged-football-fixture-calendar-doc-1qa0203
 
A series of emergency meetings is under way to decide whether Wimbledon can go ahead this year.

The All England Club says a final decision is yet to be made, but the cancellation of the Championships for the first time since World War Two now seems inevitable.

The Wimbledon Championships are due to run for two weeks from Monday 29 June.

The French Open has already been pushed back four months to late September because of the coronavirus pandemic.

"I guess everyone's been waiting on it," Britain's seven time Grand Slam doubles champion Jamie Murray told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

"It's obviously the next big event in the tennis calendar that's still on the calendar for the moment."

BBC Sport understands a decision to abandon this year's grass court season is likely be made in conjunction with three governing bodies - the Lawn Tennis Association, the Association of Tennis Professionals and the Women's Tennis Association - within the next 48 hours.

The All England Club admitted last week that a postponement would not be "without significant risk and difficulty," and Murray says there are many practical reasons for that.

"I think for them, it's difficult to move the tournament back because you're running into other tournaments that are for the moment still on the schedule," he explained.

"And also just things like daylight to host the event. Each week that passes, you get less and less light to play the tournament. And obviously they play until nine and 10 o'clock each night at Wimbledon."

The All England Club is confident it will be able to refund ticket and debenture holders through the insurance policies it has in place.

But tennis will be denied its annual chance to showcase the sport in the UK, and to encourage people to take to the courts.

The preceding grass court tournaments in Nottingham, Birmingham, Eastbourne and at Queen's Club in London will also be affected.

There is likely to be no professional tennis played anywhere until at least 13 July, which leaves players like Murray in the same boat as everyone else.

"I'm just at home, taking the necessary precautions, and trying to stay as active as I can," the Scot continued.

"It's different. We're used to being on the road all the time, used to being in different cities every week, and you kind of become institutionalised to that.

"So even when I'm at events, come Friday, Saturday, when you're starting to play for big prizes, your mind's kind of like, ready to go to the next event because that's just what you've been programmed to do."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/tennis/52103050
 
Sports is the last thing on anyone's mind right now.
 
London Mayor Sadiq Khan has written to nine football clubs in England's capital city to ask for their assistance in the fight against coronavirus.

He has asked clubs in the top two divisions, including Arsenal, Chelsea and West Ham, for access to team doctors, physios, paramedics and other clinically trained staff, as well as stadiums and accommodation.

Tottenham are not included as they are already helping City Hall.

Mr Khan said: “As we work together to tackle the threat of coronavirus, the community spirit of London’s football clubs has shone through.

"Many have already offered support and are assisting the response in their local communities.

"This week, I have written to the capital’s Premier League and Championship clubs outlining what they can do to help our fantastic NHS and I’m grateful for the hugely positive response we have received.”
 
Premier League footballers 'living in moral vacuum'

Premier League footballers are living in a "moral vacuum" as clubs furlough staff during the coronavirus pandemic, according to Julian Knight, chair of the UK's Digital, Culture, Media and Sport committee.

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan added that he thinks top-flight players should "carry the burden".

Tottenham, owned by billionaire Joe Lewis, who has a net worth of £4.3bn, came under fire after saying the club would use a government scheme to "protect jobs".

The north London club announced that 550 non-playing staff would take a 20% pay cut, including chairman Daniel Levy who earned £7m last year.

Brighton chief executive Paul Barber defended the football industry, saying costs have continued while income has "literally stopped pretty much overnight".

"I can fully understand why people think that the football industry and particularly the Premier League has got a lot of cash. In many cases that’s not the case, it’s a bit of a myth," he said.
 
Wimbledon has been cancelled for the first time since World War Two because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The tournament was due to be played between 29 June and 12 July.

The entire grass-court season has been abandoned, and there will be no professional tennis anywhere in the world until at least 13 July.

Wimbledon is the latest major summer sporting event to be called off, with Euro 2020 and the Tokyo Olympics postponed for 12 months.

It follows the postponement of the French Open, which was due to begin in May but has been rescheduled to 20 September-4 October.

"This is a decision that we have not taken lightly, and we have done so with the highest regard for public health and the wellbeing of all those who come together to make Wimbledon happen," said Ian Hewitt, All England Lawn Tennis Club chairma.

"It has weighed heavily on our minds that the staging of the Championships has only been interrupted previously by World Wars but, following thorough and extensive consideration of all scenarios, we believe it is ultimately the right decision to cancel this year's Championships, and instead concentrate on how we can use the breadth of Wimbledon's resources to help those in our local communities and beyond.

"Our thoughts are with all those who have been and continue to be affected by these unprecedented times."

Why decide now?

The All England Club did not need to make a decision before the end of April, but the writing has been on the wall for some time.

That is when on-site preparations would have had to begin in earnest: a forlorn hope given the current restrictions in place in the UK.

As was the thought that by the end of June, 40,000 people would be able to take their seats in packed stands, and jostle for the best vantage point in the narrow walkways bordering the outside courts.

The government's advice that large gatherings should not take place is aimed, in no small part, at relieving the pressure on the emergency services, which would otherwise be in attendance. It is undeniably optimistic to assume the demands on the health service will have returned to normal levels by mid-summer.

Swift cancellation should help reduce any losses that Wimbledon, and the LTA's series of grass-court events, might incur - but there is also the issue of perception.

The All England Club would not want to be seen to be pushing ahead with a sporting event as the death toll continues to rise and the country remains in the grip of the pandemic.

Sticking resolutely to a place on the calendar, only to cancel abruptly, or postponing by a few weeks before having to concede defeat, is messy. It is not the way Wimbledon does things. Better, instead, to face facts and plan to return with a flourish in 2021.

What about refunds and impact on finances?

The All England Club had the foresight to take out insurance policies which will shield them from eye-watering losses. They will therefore be able to refund ticket holders, broadcast partners and sponsors - a bill which, even according to conservative estimates, will top £200m.

The Lawn Tennis Association will also receive its 'annual surplus' of profits. The payment, which effectively funds British tennis' governing body for the year ahead, was over £40m in 2018.

It is likely to fall, but should not leave an irreparable hole at the heart of the LTA's finances, especially as it has reserves of over £160m

But the LTA has lost over £12m in the past two years, and will also be hit by the loss of all of the summer grass-court events. Of those, only the Fever Tree Championships at Queen's Club actually returns a profit, but as they are not insured against cancellation, this year's losses will inevitably be greater.

But the biggest blow for British tennis is the loss of the best shop window of the year. No Queen's, Eastbourne or Wimbledon means no BBC TV exposure for the sport, and even if we are allowed to return to the courts, there is very unlikely to be the dramatic spike in participation usually seen in the months of June and July.

Will there be any tennis at all in 2020?

No-one is holding their breath for a resumption of the tour in Hamburg, Bastad, Bucharest and Lausanne on 13 July.

The Olympic tournament is already on hold; the prestigious events in Toronto and Montreal in the middle of August are said to be under threat; and the USTA has publicly floated the possibility of pushing back the US Open start date of 31 August.

There has even been talk behind the scenes of staging the US Open in Indian Wells, California, in December. But if you take the US Open out of New York and push it back three months, it won't be the US Open.

If professional tennis is able to resume, then the WTA in particular seems keen to make up for lost time and continue beyond the WTA Championships scheduled for the first week in November.

But the global nature of the sport, which requires players to cross continents with so much regularity, may yet make this debate an academic one as far as 2020 is concerned.

As the 2006 Wimbledon champion Amelie Mauresmo said on Twitter earlier this week: "I think we are going to have to draw a line under the 2020 tennis season.

"An international circuit = players of all nationalities, as well as coaches, spectators and those coming from all four corners of the world to bring these events to life.

"No vaccine = no tennis."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/tennis/52104196
 
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