Bundesliga could provide blueprint
for NFL
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[May 11, 2020]
(Reuters) - The National
Football League has time on its side as the sports world prepares to
emerge from the COVID-19 pandemic and will use some it to observe
German soccer's Bundesliga as a potential blueprint on how to deal
with the outbreak.
The NFL, which is due to kick off on Sept. 10 and has not yet seen
its schedule affected by the novel coronavirus, is paying close
attention to protocols other leagues, particularly the Bundesliga,
are putting in place in a bid to restart play, according to a report
in Newsday.
The top-flight Bundesliga season will restart on May 16, making it
the first European league to resume amid the pandemic that has
infected more than 3.95 million people globally and killed more than
270,000.
"We’ve been in contact with all domestic leagues, but also sports
organizations around the world,” Brian McCarthy, the NFL’s vice
president of communications, told Newsday.
“We have a number of protocols, see what works, see what can
translate into our sport.
"We’re all in the sports business, but every sport has its own
matters to attend to."
Germany’s top flight will resume under strict health protocols, with
no fans allowed in stadiums.
All teams have had to go into a seven-day training camp in complete
isolation with players tested before their inclusion in the camps to
reduce the risk of any infection.
About 300 people, including players, staff and officials, will be in
and around the stadiums during matchdays.
The NFL unveiled its 2020 schedule on Thursday with the expectation
of playing games with fans in the stadiums but is approaching the
season with some caution.
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The Vince Lombardi Trophy on display during the 2020 NFL Combine at
the Indiana Convention Center. Mandatory Credit: Brian Spurlock-USA
TODAY Sports/File Photo
League commissioner Roger Goodell has informed teams they will be
required to have a ticket refund policy in place for cancelled or
disrupted games.
McCarthy told Newsday: "We’re looking at what we can adopt, what we
can modify that is working in other sports, sharing best practices".
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto. Editing by Ken Ferris)
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