Premier League ready to get flying under new guidelines

Players will not need to self-isolate if someone from another team they have come into contact with tests positive for coronavirus, under protocols drawn up by the Premier League.

The league believes its testing programme – where players undergo a test twice a week – along with temperature checks and health questionnaires will allow them to mitigate the risks of the virus spreading between players during a match.

A clinical passport, proving that individual has tested negative for coronavirus within the last five days, must be presented to enter the ‘red zone’ of a stadium – basically the pitch and the area immediately around it.

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Research on 288 Premier League matches this season, conducted by league officials, found that 98 per cent of the time on-pitch interactions between players lasted less than five minutes in total. That is well under the 15 minutes of close contact the Government sets as the threshold for someone to be traced when an individual tests positive.

Preparing for kick-off: Premier League plans in place. Picture: PAPreparing for kick-off: Premier League plans in place. Picture: PA
Preparing for kick-off: Premier League plans in place. Picture: PA

Clubs unanimously approved the protocols and the matchday operations plan at a shareholders’ meeting on Thursday, ahead of the league’s restart on June 17 amid the Covid-19 outbreak.

Players have been reminded of the need to maintain social distancing when celebrating goals and speaking to referees.

While touching of elbows – which has been a regular sight in German football since the Bundesliga resumed – will not be prohibited, the key message is to maintain social distancing wherever possible.

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They must also keep their distance from referees, while coaching staff on the sidelines are equally under instruction not to come within two metres of the fourth official.

Coaching staff and substitutes wear masks in the Bundesliga but it is understood this will not happen in the Premier League, and players will not wear them on arrival at matches at all. Teams will walk out on a staggered basis, while players will be reminded to avoid spitting or clearing their nose during games.

The red zone of a stadium will only be accessible to a maximum of 110 people at any one time. The amber zone of a stadium will be occupied by media, while the outer area of the stadium is classified as the green zone. The total number of people required to attend any match is likely to be around the 300 mark.

Teams will travel to matches using flights, coach travel or their own vehicles depending on the circumstances.

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Overnight stays in hotels are not prohibited, but a flight is preferred. Clubs are working to reconfigure coaches to allow for social distancing on board, or will lay on more than one coach if necessary. VAR officials will be based at the usual Stockley Park base, but additional rooms are being used in order to maintain social distancing.

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