However, the lessons learned on marshalling and enforcing social
distancing at such local races or a small-scale soccer match could
help with the management of elite gatherings such as major marathons
when they are possible, Brian McCloskey said.
"The bigger the competition the more complicated mitigating actions
will have to be and therefore the less likely it is that they can be
done safely," McCloskey, a member of the World Health Organization
Novel Coronavirus-19 Mass Gatherings Expert Group, told the BBC.
"So an event that involves lots of travel across the country or
between countries ... (it is) much more complicated to see how that
happens. A local event, community football, running ... much easier
to see how that happens."
McCloskey said community events, in which a limited number of people
join in near their homes, could then provide professional contests
with information to help organisers scale back up to events drawing
athletes from all over the world.
"If you look at something like road running, if we go back to
Parkruns, you could start those because they don't involve a lot of
travel around the country," he said.
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"Involve local communities, you can manage how it's done and in
doing that you can learn how marshalling can help with social
distancing in a run.
"That helps you work out 'how can I do a city marathon?', and
ultimately 'how can I get the London Marathon and Boston Marathon
back up again?'."
The World Players Association, an association representing some
85,000 athletes around the world through more than 100 player
associations in over 60 countries, said on Tuesday professional
athletes should not be rushed back to action.
The coronavirus has infected more than 3.11 million people globally,
causing more than 216,600 deaths, prompting a shutdown of business,
education and world sport.
(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Bengaluru; Editing by Alison
Williams)
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