
Liverpool players: just two more victories to win the English Premier league
The Premier League returns on Wednesday after 100 days in the deep freeze, with Liverpool on the brink of winning the title in a radically changed football universe.
The English top flight follows Germany’s Bundesliga and La Liga in Spain in rebooting their seasons after the coronavirus lockdown, aiming to cram 92 games into six weeks of breathless action.
Aston Villa kick off against Sheffield United, to be followed later on Wednesday by Manchester City v Arsenal, before a cascade of matches.
Despite vocal complaints from some clubs and stars including Sergio Aguero and Raheem Sterling, “Project Restart” has largely gone smoothly, with regular testing of players and staff yielding few positives.
But when Villa and Sheffield United kick off, the watching world will be confronted with a jarring spectacle, with an eerie silence in the usually noisy stands.
Piping crowd chants into stadiums, cardboard cut-outs of supporters and live video fan walls will add colour but it will be impossible to mimic the usual vibrant atmosphere.
In total, about 300 people will be allowed in stadiums for each match, with strict health protocols in place.
There will be widespread disinfection of changing facilities, dugouts, matchballs, goalposts, corner flags and substitution boards.
People other than players and coaching staff on team benches must wear face coverings.
The games themselves will look different.
Players have been told to maintain social-distancing during goal celebrations and encouraged not to spit.
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta admits players will have to find motivation without the urgency provided by fans.
“The game is different,” he said in his pre-match press conference on Monday.
“The intensity drops a little bit. That urgency from the crowd doesn’t exist any more, how passionate the crowds are in England. We have to adapt.
“We have to experience it. We have to find ways to motivate our players as well in moments.”
But Aston Villa manager Dean Smith said his players were desperate to return, talking about the honour of playing the first game.
“The eyes of the world will be on us and we are looking forward to it,” he said.
“The players have been itching to get back.”
The hectic fixture list, warm summer temperatures and a lack of preparation time could lead to more injuries, so world governing body FIFA has given the green light for five substitutions per match.
Join The Conversation
You May Like
Latest
Maina wanted to elope to U.S – EFCC
COVID-19: Nigeria committed to mitigate impact on children – Minister
Toke Makinwa finds love again
Nigeria to get first 100,000 COVID-19 vaccines in February
Supporters Club chief, Ladipo mourns Joe Erico
Ronaldo yet to break Josef Bican’s goal scoring record: Czech FF
New retirement age for teachers takes effect Jan. 1 – FG
Ilorin chauffeur Oluwasegun jailed over N2m mistakenly credited to his account
Nigeria will maintain regional position in oil, gas industry
Nissi launches stunning new 3D Afro-Anime project ‘The Satchel’
China to gift Pakistan 500,000 COVID-19 vaccine doses
Nigeria Economic Sustainability Plan on track – Analyst
Biden invites Nigerian family to White House in a surprise phone call [Video]
Africa lacks enough oxygen to treat COVID-19 patients – CDC
JUST IN: Buhari re-appoints Hadiza Usman as NPA MD
COVID-19: Epe local council to enforce compliance with safety protocols
‘Holy Ghost’ lands in prison for cheating
Sergio Aguero hit by COVID-19, big blow for Manchester City
Northern Elders ask herdsmen to stay put in Ondo forests
FRSC decorates newly promoted officers in Rivers
DHQ: Why troops abandoned their base during attack by Boko/ISWAP in Borno