Sport left to sweat on rescue from a half-listening government | Sean Ingle

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There is anger that sports have jumped through hoops to make stadiums safe yet track and trace is still so ineffective

After a kick in the teeth, a kiss of life? Sports bodies were left blindsided and woozy by the announcement on Tuesday that the return of crowds to stadiums would not only be “paused” but could be delayed until 1 April. Then came a slither of hope with the news that up to eight elite sports are now likely to be helped by a rescue package. The question now is how deep is the government’s pockets – and will the money really be enough?

Make no mistake: this is a crisis so menacing it should come accompanied by the soundtrack to Jaws. How can it not be when the Premier League is warning that football is losing £100m a month? Or when the Rugby Football Union chief executive, Bill Sweeney, a man not prone to hyperbole, says rugby clubs at the heart of communities across England are “in danger of disappearing for ever”. Racing, cricket, golf: they are all saying the same thing. The pips have already been squeezed. Even the plinth is dry.

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Written by Sean Ingle
This news first appeared on https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2020/sep/22/can-technology-give-sport-fighting-chance-of-seeing-fans-returning under the title “Sport left to sweat on rescue from a half-listening government | Sean Ingle”. Bolchha Nepal is not responsible or affiliated towards the opinion expressed in this news article.