Clubs reap what they sow when it comes to this brutally virulent new Covid variant.
Manchester United‘s Ralf Rangnick has been just as tepid about demanding players vaccinate as Ole Gunnar Solskjaer ever was.
A member of the United medical staff didn’t even know that the club were keeping open the Carrington training ground for 120 players and staff on Monday, after all first team staff had been removed from the premises. Now the club have 21 cases. Just join the dots on that one.
Brighton fans have their Covid vaccination passes checked before Wednesday night’s game against Wolves in what is likely to become a familiar routine for supporters across the UK
The Burnley vs Watford game at Turf Moor was called off just two hours before kick-off on Wednesday night following a Covid outbreak in the Hornets camp
But beyond those cases of managerial timidity, this is the story of a variant moving at a phenomenal pace. Of two epidemics taking hold at once.
Of the UK reporting its highest number of daily infections since the pandemic began and the NHS being placed on its highest state of alert.
‘Level 4 National Incident’ as those on the front line know it only too well.
We are staring down the barrel of a national crisis – March 2020 revisited – and all of that adds up to the incontestable fact that the Premier League programme must be suspended.
Man United’s Carrington training base was closed again and will remain shut until Tuesday
Manchester United were able to train this week but only nine players were available to play on Saturday, causing the postponement of their home fixture against Brighton
You only had to listen to the supremely articulate NHS medical director of primary care, Dr Nikki Kanani, during Wednesday evening’s press conference with the Prime Minister, to question why a weekend programme which will encourage tens of thousands to congregate is actually going ahead, 48 hours from now.
‘My advice would be if you’re going to go to a stadium at the weekend, make it one where you can get your vaccine or help out to give a vaccine rather than going to watch a match,’ Kanani said.
Downing Street’s press people hardly backed her to the hilt, briefing by early evening that Kanani was ‘not being prescriptive’ and that: ‘We understand it’s a personal choice for the public.’
Brentford boss Thomas Frank wants this weekend’s Premier League games to be postponed
The Bees have recorded 13 positive cases among players and club staff as of Thursday
But no spin could erase the message of Kanani – someone who knows, from the inside what is heading down the tracks, for hospitals and the NHS.
There will, of course, be objections to the idea of the Premier League – and the EFL – closing down, for what should be at least a 10-day circuit break.
When will the game start up again, if this variant continues to rage?
How will the game contend with the fixture pile-up, given that we are entering the traditional forest of Christmas fixtures? There’s a winter break next season for Qatar’s World Cup. No room to push things back.
To which the answer has to be that though football is the modern day religion, it is also a sport. A game.
Brendan Rodgers fears the Premier League are bowing to pressure from broadcasters
In the end, Thursday’s fixture between Leicester and Tottenham was called off due to Covid
A mere trifle set against the broader picture of an NHS again so crippled that hotels are being used to relieve pressure on beds in some parts of England.
The events we are now reporting on within the game also cry out for the entire merry-go-round to halt.
We have been plunged back into new rounds of protest and indignation, with some clubs – Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur – allowed to cancel fixtures, while others – initially Leicester City, a club with seven Covid-stricken players – are not.
It was hard to disagree with Leicester manager Brendan Rodgers’ observation on Wednesday that broadcasters were dictating events.
The subsequent cancellation of his side’s home match with Tottenham came as fans of the latter prepared to travel.
Covid threatens to ruin Christmas cheer this year but football seems determined to carry on
The decision to postpone Burnley’s home match against Watford was announced at 5pm on Wednesday, as people were beginning to arrive for a 7.30pm kick-off. Chaos, everywhere.
It was later agreed that Leicester’s trip to Everton at the weekend was also a no-go. Three other weekend fixtures soon got chopped.
There is a fog of uncertainty when it comes to the Premier League and this virus.
We have had no transparency on the levels of vaccination among players since the total percentage – 68 per cent – was last shared in October.
But the Premier League can provide leadership now. When the nation’s chief medical officer is declaring that ‘Covid infection records will be broken a lot over the next few weeks’ and pleading with us to cut back on socialising, the prospect of football playing merrily on is nothing less than an embarrassment.
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