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Coronavirus Pandemic: How will absence of intl. sporting events effect people's mental states?

MenInG

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No doubt that the Coronavirus Pandemic is a serious existential threat to everyone on this planet but sports makes an important past time for all of us.

With most if not all international sporting events being cancelled/postponed, I fear for the mental state for many of us.

If worst comes and lockdowns become commonplace in cities around the world - how will people entertain themselves and what effects will it have on the mental wellbeing of the society as a whole?
 
I don't think lack of entertainment events will hamper much. As long as the panic is controlled, it shouldn't be a bigger factor. The world has seen worse and have come out of it.
 
I don't think lack of entertainment events will hamper much. As long as the panic is controlled, it shouldn't be a bigger factor. The world has seen worse and have come out of it.

I understand what you mean - but from your memory in recent times - what worst has the world seen?
 
There is a 75% chance the Premier League season will not be completed due to coronavirus, a senior club source has told Sky Sports News.

English football chiefs decided on Friday to suspend Premier League and all other top-level football fixtures until 3 April at the earliest because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The virus outbreak is causing major disruption to the sporting calendar and may not reach its peak until 10-14 weeks' time - well after the football season is due to finish.

The Premier League club source told SSN's Kaveh Solhekol: "I can't see any chance we will be back in three weeks. This will go on for months and you wonder even about the start of next season."

He added: "I'd say there is a 75% chance the season will not be completed. There are huge questions to answer. Does anybody get promoted or relegated?

"Many clubs in all four divisions will struggle financially."

An emergency Premier League meeting is set to take place on Thursday when football chiefs will decide what happens next.

If the season is not completed then these are some of the possible scenarios:

Give the title to Liverpool and have no relegations this season. Next season there would be 22 teams in the Premier League - with West Brom and Leeds promoted from the Championship
The season is declared null and void and next season begins with the same 20 teams - unlikely, especially because Liverpool are 25 points clear at the top of the table and have all but won their first title for 30 years
The table as it stands now is the final table - unlikely, because it would be unfair to relegate Bournemouth, Aston Villa and Norwich after only 29 matchdays
West Ham vice-chairman Karren Brady says this season's Premier League should be declared "null and void" if it can't be finished due to the pandemic.

Ms Brady, who will attend the Premier League meeting on Thursday, claimed it would be "the only fair and reasonable thing to do" if there are further delays to the season.

"Suspension or cancellation of the league was always a certainty," she wrote in The Sun.

"There is no dodging the possibility that all levels in the EFL, as well as the Premier League, will have to be cancelled and this season declared null and void because if the players can't play the games can't go ahead.

"The PL hopes that an interlude of three weeks from today will enable it to restart but that may well be dreamland."

She added: "Who knows who would have gone down or come up if the games have not actually been played in full?

"[It is] a huge blow to Liverpool who might be robbed of their first title in 30 years. This will be discussed between the PL and the clubs next week at an emergency meeting."

Relegation-threatened West Ham currently sit 16th in the table, level on points with AFC Bournemouth in 18th.

Premier League clubs are waiting to sse what happens at a meeting of European football stakeholders which UEFA has scheduled on Tuesday.

Leading figures in the European game will decide what to do about this season's Champions League, Europa League and Euro 2020.


https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...ll-not-be-completed-says-club-source-11957415
 
I don't think lack of entertainment events will hamper much. As long as the panic is controlled, it shouldn't be a bigger factor. The world has seen worse and have come out of it.

I agree with this sentiment
During the last killing pandemic millions of Christians actually embraced religion as they were that fearful of death
 
I understand what you mean - but from your memory in recent times - what worst has the world seen?

In recent years, not upto this level.

But human mind has a great resilience. When crisis comes, it adapts itself to cope with the incoming stressful environment.

Current situation will have much lesser mental stress than the people in world wars. Here, atleast you can isolate yourself and have greater chance of survival. But going through wars leaves a mental scar and hence, PTSD is pretty common even for people who didn't physically undergo anything related to war.

You are comparing the stress in reference to current scenario. But when crisis comes, the mind automatically starts to make adjustments (resilience) which will change priorities in each one's life and hence those aspect, which seems much important right now, may not be even significant once it kicks in.
 
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Dont think its a big deal.
Spcially when people know how dire the situation is.
And for the entertainment part internet is still ON.
And for sports lover they can still watch thier favourite past sports matches :-)
 
Good opinion piece from BBC's Tom Fordyce - Chief sports writer

===

It's only when something disappears that you realise quite how much you miss it. It's only when something close to you goes that you understand how much has changed.

No-one anchored in the current dark reality should be thinking that the cancellation of elite sport this past weekend matters much compared to the wider crises at large.

Except in a small hidden way we have. Sport can play many roles for us - a thrill, a source of perennial disappointment, a way of working out who we are - but it's often quite sensible things too.

An escape, taking us away from the serious stuff. All the times a game or a race or a neat little self-contained drama makes us feel better, or makes us feel worse but in the process helps us forget about the escalating life-size dramas we feel powerless to control.

A routine, structuring our days, ordering our weeks. Saturday morning is better than Monday morning. Wednesday nights are bigger than Thursdays. Five minutes to three on a Saturday afternoon is maybe the best of all.

Sport is a calendar. The end of the Six Nations should mark the start of spring. The searing greens and blues of the Masters tell you winter is beaten and warmth and blossom all around. The European Championships are summer evenings and barbecues and beers taking over from vegetables on the bottom shelves of the fridge.

Sport makes sense, most of the time. There are precedents and organisation and timelines. You do this and this happens. You start here and you end there.

None of which feels true in the path of a pandemic that has accelerated across old borders. And so sport becomes our prism for trying to understand what that is and what it means.

How coronavirus has impacted sporting events around the world
For most people in Britain coronavirus currently feels a theoretical onslaught rather than a personal one. The detonation of those familiar routines and closing off of the escapes is the first time many of us have begun to understand what might really be going on.

You need to instinctively turn on the radio or TV on a Saturday afternoon and wait for the frantic excitement of goals going in and tries being scored only to find nothing but unfamiliar voices and sober bulletins to realise that these are no longer normal times.

You need to wonder why seven-a-side games for eight-year-old kids watched by only a few keen parents have been cancelled to comprehend what other changes may be coming your way. You have to learn that Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta is in self-isolation to figure out that this is not a disease for strangers and those far away from your world.

It is here and it is now. It is selfish to think of it in terms of what it might mean for league titles or promotion and relegation, ludicrous to waste time thinking how it might affect bets or big weekends planned. But it also makes sense, because it is a private way in to a problem that is no longer everyone else's.

When there is no football or rugby to go to you don't stop in the pub for those pre-match drinks and you don't buy a programme put together at a local printers. You don't catch the tram or the bus there and you don't stop for chips or a dirty burger on the way home.

You appreciate how something apparently trivial like the cancellation of a game is going to impact on the lives not just of the millionaires who would have played it but the working people who depended on it. You are part of those benign ripples and when they go you can see it and you can empathise.

Sport doesn't matter but it does. It is how many of us experience community. It's standing in a stadium surrounded by strangers in the same colours singing the same songs that you can feel like you are most at home.

It's watching from the sofa while firing messages away on multiple WhatsApp groups that you keep tight the bonds with old friends. It's reacting in the same way to the same game on TV as countless millions you will never meet that can make you feel part of something bigger than just you.

These may be strange days and weeks ahead. They might feel empty in a way they haven't for a long time.

Those invisible links and relationships will matter all the more. In a time of isolation, a sense of belonging. Keeping an eye out, making a call, holding on to the connection.

We might also remember those ties and how it will be when it comes back. It may be a long time until normal service is resumed, but when it is the return of matches and games across the country will be one of the first signs and one of the real celebrations.

It happened in the post-war years at the end of a much graver crisis, in the attendances at football matches, in the packed cricket grounds around the country in the summer of 1947 after the miserable winter and long dark years that came before. The Olympics of 1948 marked 12 years since the last but also a collective desire to move forward rather than look back.

It matters less that the Euros might be postponed and this year's FA Cup may not be completed than the certainty that they will take place again. When they do we can all whinge and moan and celebrate and hug each other like happy idiots once more. The routine, and the structure, and the escape, will return.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/51902553
 
It is difficult to live without sports but I am sure people can find something. They can play video games or do other things.
 
Personally speaking, only options left are jogging/running outside! Cant sit with people and watch old recordings also - video games by yourself only.
 
Forget intl events, if my summer cricket league here in NJ gets postponed or cancelled, i will be go crazy. After 6 months of winter, its finally time to play cricket outside and Corona is destroying everything.
 
I understand what you mean - but from your memory in recent times - what worst has the world seen?

Lol exactly. Lockdown ******* with their amazing insight to world mental health
 
Forget intl events, if my summer cricket league here in NJ gets postponed or cancelled, i will be go crazy. After 6 months of winter, its finally time to play cricket outside and Corona is destroying everything.

Stay strong buddy. There will be cricket Inshallah this summer
 
Dont think its a big deal.
Spcially when people know how dire the situation is.
And for the entertainment part internet is still ON.
And for sports lover they can still watch thier favourite past sports matches :-)

It isn’t a big deal for nerds or people who don’t play much sport anyways in their daily lives
 
Lorenzo Sanz: Former Real Madrid president dies after contracting coronavirus

Former Real Madrid president Lorenzo Sanz died on Saturday after being hospitalised with coronavirus.

Sanz, 76, was president at the Bernabeu from 1995-2000, a period in which Real won the Champions League twice.

"My father has just died," wrote Sanz's son Lorenzo Sanz Duran on Twitter.

"He did not deserve this end in this manner. One of the best, most courageous and hard working people I have seen in my life. His family and Real Madrid were his passion."

Sanz signed players such as Roberto Carlos, Clarence Seedorf and Davor Suker during his time in charge of the 33-time Spanish champions,

He lost the 2000 presidential election to Florentino Perez, which sparked Real's big-spending 'Galatico' era.

Sanz's son Fernando, 46, played for Real Madrid from 1996-1999 before spending the final seven years of his career at Malaga.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/51991851
 
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