Friday 26 June 2020

How the Bundesliga became the first top league to restart


Berlin (AFP) – When Christian Seifert, chief executive of the German Football League (DFL), hands the Bundesliga trophy to Bayern Munich on Saturday, his gamble to restart football in Germany despite the coronavirus pandemic will have paid off.

Seifert will present the trophy to Bayern — champions for the eighth straight year — after their game at Wolfsburg when the league season finishes this weekend.

It was Seifert’s work behind the scenes — convincing politicians, the public and players alike — which enabled the Bundesliga to restart on May 16 and become the first top European league back in action following the shutdown.

“It was a massive challenge,” Seifert admitted at a recent media event.

He claimed “a third of clubs would have faced massive financial problems” had the season ended in March, forfeiting millions in television money.

With 56,000 jobs reliant on the league, “that was something worth fighting for. It was about securing the clubs and saving jobs.”

After a two-month hiatus due to COVID-19, the Bundesliga restart was marked by strict hygiene measures and stringent testing, with players’ calls echoing around empty grounds, in order to complete the nine remaining rounds.

It was a bold gamble by Seifert, after the DFL fought to convince players it was safe to return and win over a public sceptical about top-flight football resuming at a time when even playgrounds were closed.

– Unity is strength –

A factor in Seifert’s favour was that the 36 clubs in Germany’s top two tiers pulled together quickly.

“We had the full support of the big clubs, Bayern Munich and Dortmund, but also the others,” he said. 

“That put me in a very, very strong position when I spoke to top politicians and could make commitments with the league behind me.”

When the pandemic hit Germany, Seifert reacted fast after suspending league matches on March 13.

“We were very quick,” he said. “We halted the league and the next night I started planning at home.

“We started work on the 16th, making the first calls to set up a medical team capable of drawing up a protocol for the restart.”

At the end of April, the Bundesliga’s medical guidelines were made public, the main fear being that an outbreak of the virus among players would abruptly end the season for good.

“We set up a network of laboratories throughout Germany, with almost military logistics, to make sure that nothing would go wrong,” Seifert explained.



from World Soccer Talk https://ift.tt/2ZbaMrU

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