Local sport easier to restart after virus, says health adviser

Local sport easier to restart after virus, says health adviser
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Community sport could return before top-level sport, according to a public health adviser to the World Health Organization AFP/File
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Community sport could return first when coronavirus restrictions are eased despite the focus on top-level action, according to a public health adviser to the World Health Organization.

London: Community sport could return first when coronavirus restrictions are eased despite the focus on top-level action, according to a public health adviser to the World Health Organization.

Sport across the globe is at a standstill due to the COVID-19 pandemic but sporting bodies are in talks with authorities over a potential resumption of competition. The Premier League is hoping to resume its season on June 8 as part of a plan labelled "Project Restart" while sports ministers in Germany have said the Bundesliga could return from the middle of next month. But Brian McCloskey, former public health director for the 2012 London Olympics, said the logistics of sport at a much lower level make it more feasible as restrictions are slowly lifted.

"The bigger the match, the bigger the competition, the more complicated those mitigating actions will have to be, and therefore the less likely it is that they can be done safely," McCloskey told BBC Sport. "So an event that involves lots of travel across the country or between countries, much more complicated to see how that happens. A local event, community football, a community running, much easier to see how that happens. Bigger events will be a challenge this summer." FIFA's medical chief Michel D'Hooghe told the BBC he was sceptical about restarting league football during the coronavirus pandemic, warning it could have "life and death" consequences.

McCloskey said the plan to restart the Premier League as possible but warned it was more difficult to reduce risk in contact sports. He said although playing football behind closed doors would remove the risk of crowds transmitting the virus, there remained a risk regarding public perception. "There is a slight risk, I suppose, from the Premier League's point of view that it sort of implies that getting the money in is more important than the fans, so we have to manage that aspect of public perception as well," he said.

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