Record 40 positive cases puts more strain on Premier League | Inquirer Sports

Record 40 positive cases puts more strain on Premier League

/ 05:01 PM January 06, 2021

English Premier League

The logo is pictured through a glass window at the headquarters of the English Premier League in London on March 13, 2020. (Photo by Isabel Infantes / AFP)

The Premier League confirmed on Tuesday that 40 players and staff tested positive for coronavirus in two rounds of testing over the past week but insisted the season would continue as planned.

That figure is more than double the previous record of 18 positive cases and comes as England enters a nationwide lockdown to halt soaring infection rates.

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Three matches were postponed last week due to outbreaks o COVID-19 at Manchester City and Fulham.

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However, the British government has given the go-ahead for elite sport to continue despite the tighter restrictions.

Twice-weekly testing, used during the “Project Restart” plan to complete last season, has resumed in the Premier League after being scaled down to once-a-week at the start of the season.

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In the first round of testing last week, 28 positive cases were detected from 1,311 tests, with a further 12 positives from 984 tests in the second round of testing.

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Despite the postponements, rising case numbers and calls from some within the game for a circuit breaker to buy time and bring infection rates down, the Premier League said it remained confident the season could proceed as planned.

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“With low numbers of positive tests across the overwhelming majority of clubs, the league continues to have confidence in its  COVID-19 protocols, fully backed by the government, to enable fixtures to be played as scheduled,” the league said in a statement on Tuesday.

Due to the late end to last season, the English top-flight is less than halfway through the 2020/21 campaign.

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The packed fixture schedule, with domestic leagues, cup and European competitions having to be finished before the delayed Euro 2020 starting on June 11, leaves little room for maneuver in the calendar.

However, a number of embarrassing incidents have come to light in which prominent players have flouted coronavirus restrictions, doing little to aid English football’s case to keep going.

Pictures of Tottenham trio Erik Lamela, Sergio Reguilon and Giovani Lo Celso and West Ham’s Manuel Lanzini attending a Christmas party with family and friends emerged over the weekend, prompting Spurs to promise internal disciplinary proceedings.

City has also launched an investigation after left-back Benjamin Mendy admitted to breaching COVID-19 protocols by hosting a New Year’s Eve party.

Reguilon and Mendy were included on the bench for Tottenham and City over the weekend, leading to calls for stricter sanctions against players who put the future of the season at risk by breaking the rules.

“There are moments when young people will stray from the rules and, whether you’re a parent or the chief executive of a football club, that’s a time when you have to be very strict and remind people of their responsibilities,” said Aston Villa chief executive Christian Purslow.

Despite City’s issues with the virus, which left them without four first-team regulars for Sunday’s 3-1 victory at Chelsea, manager Pep Guardiola called for more understanding for players.

“It would be better if, before we judge others, we judge ourselves,” said Guardiola. “I’m not justifying that, he (Mendy) broke the rules. But don’t give too many lessons to others.”

City faces Manchester United in a League Cup semifinal on Wednesday and United boss Ole Gunnar Solskjaer hopes football will be able to continue to offer entertainment locked down in their homes.

“We are privileged to play football under the protocols that we are working under,” said the Norwegian.

“I think mentally, for many, it would be a release to watch games now, especially when we’re in full lockdown again.

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“We hope that we can continue, but we know that we have to work hard to stay within the rules and guidelines.”

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TAGS: Coronavirus Pandemic, COVID-19, EPL, Premier League

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