1. Neutral venues
There is not expected to be a vote on Monday over the issue of playing the remaining 92 matches at eight to 10 neutral venues but the highly contentious issue will dominate. It may prove a breaking point as emotions run high. So far the clubs have maintained a relatively cordial relationship in meetings but that is cracking. It could become more confrontational.
It has wrongly been portrayed that neutral venues are being pushed by the Premier League when, at present, they are a pre-requisite demanded by the Government, the UK Football Policing Unit and the Sports Ground Safety Authority – which issues licences for stadia – for the matches to be played. It appears non-negotiable.
pear to be on the table – although some clubs would push for it – is no relegation. But what would then happen?
2. Player contracts and June 30
Whatever plans the Premier League – or football in general – have may all fall apart if an agreement cannot be reached to extend the contracts of players (and other staff, including managers) whose deals are set to run out on June 30 which is the dates for them to currently expire. This is expected to be the only item on Monday’s agenda that has to be decided while others will, of course, be discussed.
There are 163 Premier League players who will, in theory, be out of contract while the season goes on. Fifa and the Premier League have made it clear clubs should offer extended contracts on the same terms until the end of the season, whenever that is. But legal experts have stated this will contravene English contract law if the players do not agree. What then happens?
3. Gain Government approval
Foreign secretary Dominic Raab said the Premier League’s return would “lift the nation” but they have yet to give the green light. A meeting is scheduled for Thursday and the Government has veered between encouraging football to restart, in the hope that it would be a boost to public morale and a sense of normal life returning, to being nervous that it will be out of step and appear callous when lives are being lost.
It is partly why the controls being put in place are so stringent with the aim of showing that football can be almost a standard-bearer for best practice and set an example. Squabbling between the clubs, though, will not go down well with Ministers.
4. Return to training
Clubs have been told to pencil in May 18, the same day as a further shareholders meeting, for a return to training. But they have yet to confirm that and, also, when games will resume. June 8 is now looking optimistic – clubs will need four weeks preparation – so Friday June 12 or Saturday June 13 is far more likely as the earliest potential date.
For now, though, it is a step-by-step approach because everyone knows this could all quickly unravel if the social distancing and hygiene measures are not adhered to. The argument is once the players are back it can be drilled into them as to how they need to behave. But it will depend a lot on their co-operation.
5. Getting the players on board
Premier League officials – including medical experts – will hold a videoconference call with the 20 captains and some senior players as well as the managers to explain the protocols of Project Restart and, crucially, hear about the concerns they have. Talks are expected on Tuesday and Wednesday which will also involve the Professional Footballers Association and the League Managers Association.
Everyone agrees it is vital to have the players on board and also prepared to accept the stringent hygiene and social distancing measures that will initially be in place at the training ground. Players will want to ask about liability, about what happens if there is a positive test, about whether they will be compelled to play and how they organise their home lives.
6. Convincing the public
It had been thought there would be a clamour from football fans for the sport to return but, largely, that has not been the case. Football does not feel a relevance to many people with the strongest argument against playing being the fear that it is diverting resources – testing kits, PPE equipment, emergency services –away from the frontline. The first photograph of a footballer passing through a drive-in testing centre in his Lamborghini will not look good.
The Premier League needs to speak more to explain why it is important that football returns, the measures that are in place and how it can help society. There has been a lack of leadership at that has to change. Expect more communication this week.
7. The ‘rebate’
In theory the broadcasters are due a repayment of £762million if the season is not finished and that is the main driver for the Premier League to get the games played. Of that money £371million is due to Sky Sports, £50million to BT Sport and £341million to overseas broadcasters.
But no-one really knows if they will demand it back or if they still might ask for a rebate even if the games are played behind closed doors (because it is not the same product) or – as appears more likely – whether they will renegotiate their contracts to give them longer deals and more matches which will also, ultimately, mean less money for the clubs.
They will be offered greater access – including interviews during games – while it appears certain that all of the 92 games will be broadcast, some on the companies YouTube channels, and so free-to-air.
8. The fixture list
It is becoming increasingly obvious that the Premier League wants to try and appease the broadcasters and appeal to the fans who cannot attend the games as much as possible with plans to show all the remaining 92 matches with staggered kick off times across the weekends – such as 12pm, 2.00pm, 4.30pm and 7pm on Sundays.
At present the plan appears to mirror what the fixtures would have been but they will have to change as games will not now kick off at the same time. The Football Association has been assured dates will be preserved for the FA Cup to make sure it is completed, also, but it is a logistical headache with July 26 pencilled in as the last day of the Premier League season (therefore 92 games in six weeks).
9. What happens if a player tests positive?
The Premier League will isolate only the player who tests positive – and his family – during the period of time that the squads are back in training. They will not isolate the whole squad and do not want to keep them in hotels. However no-one has yet communicated what happens if there is a positive test when the games are being played.
The Premier League is looking to the Bundesliga to provide it with the blueprint for finishing the season so the news that second-division Dynamo Dresden has gone into a 14-day quarantine and will not be able to fulfil next weekend’s opening game against Hannover 96 will have caused a shudder of apprehension. The rules are slightly different in Germany – federal authorities have more power – but it is an issue that has to be addressed in the Premier League.
10. Can the season be finished?
It will soon come down to this: can the season finish in time. Uefa needs to know by May 25 what the Premier League plan is to finish the season. So the clock is ticking. At the same time the 2020-21 season has to start by September 12 at the very latest otherwise the Premier League reasons it cannot fit in all the dates it needs plus the international and cup dates before Euro 2020 starts on June 11 2021.
If the season is abandoned then it gives the Premier League time but it is being strongly argued that not playing out the remaining games will damage the chances of the next campaign being played especially as it could take a year for a vaccine to be available and all the football authorities are accepting that fans will not be allowed into stadia until January 2021 at the earliest.
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