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FOOTBALL

German Bundesliga restart draws global audiences as players reminded to keep distance

The Bundesliga drew bumper global audiences for its restart at the weekend behind closed doors, but a top league official said the players will be reminded to maintain social distancing even during goal celebrations.

Germany's top-flight became the first top European league to resume after a two-month hiatus, behind closed doors and surrounded by draconian hygiene measures.

But despite the restrictions, the weekend's matches passed off without problems.

READ ALSO: All eyes on Germany as Bundesliga football returns

Players and staff were regularly tested for the COVID-19 virus in the weeks before the games, while the small number of accredited officials and media members had their temperatures checked before being allowed into stadiums.

Police fears that fans would gather outside the grounds did not materialise.

“There was a big sense of relief,” the CEO of the international arm of the Bundesliga, Robert Klein, told AFP and other media Monday.

“We want to finish the season, but are aware there is a big responsibility that we do this correctly.

“There was an enthusiasm to see top-flight football again.

“Someone said to me, 'it looks like the eyes of the world are on the Bundesliga' and I think that was true.

“We were trending in Colombia, Ghana, South Africa and Asia.”

'Rollercoaster'

Borussia Dortmund's Norwegian striker Erling Braut Haaland showed he had lost nothing of his power in the two-month hiatus as he scored the first goal of Saturday's restart in the 4-0 hammering of rivals Schalke.

Pay-per-view broadcaster Sky reported a record audience of six million
viewers in Germany for Saturday's matches, after making some matches available for free.

The overall global figure is expected later this week.

With fans currently starved of live football due to the pandemic, the viewing figures recorded for the Dortmund v Schalke match in football-mad Mexico, Brazil, Italy and Argentina were far higher than normal.

In the UK, broadcaster BT Sports had a peak figure of 652,000 for that same match — a respectable figure when compared with the channel's best-ever Premier League audience of 1.7 million for a Liverpool v Arsenal match in December 2018.

Klein described the last few weeks as “exhilarating, challenging… a rollercoaster” as the league got the detailed restart plans approved by the German government.

There were, however, a few glitches on Saturday.

Markus Söder, the leader of the state of Bavaria, criticised Hertha Berlin's players for hugging to celebrate goals in their 3-0 win at Hoffenheim.

There were also hugs and handshakes in some other matches, breaching hygiene guidelines which the clubs have agreed to.

The German Football League (DFL) say those concerned will not be sanctioned, but Klein said the message will be reinforced.

“In the hygiene concept, there is a guideline to celebrate within the social distancing norms,” Klein said.

“One can imagine” he added, that in the heat of the moment, for example “a goal being scored, that maybe sometimes they will get closer.

“I think the guidelines were generally well respected at the weekend.

“They are there for the clubs to implement. I am speaking to the clubs day in, day out to remind them of what needs to be done so we have the right to go to a second or third matchday.”

Following Bayern Munich's 2-0 win at Union Berlin on Sunday, Thomas Müller reminded his fellow pros of their duty as role models: “I think we are now more strictly under observation than the rest of Germany.”

'Happy to share'

The sight of elbow-bump celebrations, substitutes wearing face masks on the bench and hearing players calls echoing around empty terraces will take some getting used to.

“I think it will be the new normal for a while, until the end of the season it will be without fans and it's possible that will go into next season,” said Klein.

“Until COVID is seriously under control – and that will probably only be when a vaccine comes – it will continue to be the case.”

The Dutch league, which already curtailed its 2019-2020 season, wants to use the Bundesliga's restart plans for next season.

The head of the Spanish league has also described Germany as “an example to follow” and Klein says the Bundesliga is happy to help other professional leagues.

“We're happy to share not only the medical protocol, but also the wider work in being able to get the support of local authorities and government to implement it,” said Klein.

“It's a holistic approach which is required and without all parties coming to the table, it's not possible.”

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COVID-19

Is the pandemic over in Germany?

As much of Germany lifts - or prepares to lift - the last remaining Covid-19 measures, intensive care units say Covid-19 admissions are no longer straining the system.

Is the pandemic over in Germany?

Despite a difficult winter of respiratory illnesses, intensive care units in Germany say Covid-19 admissions have almost halved. The number of cases having to be treated in the ICU has gone down to 800 from 1,500 at the beginning of this month.

“Corona is no longer a problem in intensive care units,” Gernot Marx, Vice President of the German Interdisciplinary Association for Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine, told the German Editorial Network. “A the moment, we don’t have to think every day about how to still ensure the care of patients, but how to actually run a service that can help.”

Marx said the drop has allowed them to catch up on many postponed surgeries.

The number of sick employees in hospitals is also falling, helping to relieve the pressure on personnel.

The easing pressure on hospitals correlates with the assessment of prominent virologist and head of the Virology department at Berlin’s Charite – Christian Drosten – who said in December that the pandemic was close to ending, with the winter wave being an endemic one.

German federal and state governments are now in the midst of lifting the last of the country’s pandemic-related restrictions. Free Covid-19 antigen tests for most people, with exceptions for medical personnel, recently ended.

READ ALSO: Free Covid-19 tests end in Germany

Six federal states – Bavaria, Baden-Württemberg, Hessen, Thuringia, Lower Saxony, and Schleswig-Holstein – have ended mandatory isolation periods for people who test positive for Covid-19.

Bavaria, Saxony-Anhalt, and Schleswig-Holstein have ended the requirement to wear FFP2 masks on public transport, while Berlin, Brandenburg, Saxony, Thuringia, and Mecklenburg-West Pomerania will follow suit on February 2nd.

At that time, the federal government will also drop its requirement for masks to be worn on long-distance trains. Labour Minister Hubertus Heil says that’s when he also intends to exempt workplaces – apart from medical locations – from a mask requirement.

READ ALSO: Germany to drop mask mandate in trains and buses from February 2nd

Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg will also end the requirement for patients to wear a mask in doctor’s offices. That’s a requirement that, so far, will stay in place everywhere else. Federal Health Minister Karl Lauterbach has also said that he thinks this requirement should remain. 

But some public health insurers and general practitioners are calling for a nationwide end to the obligation for wearing masks in doctor’s offices.

“The pandemic situation is over,” National Association of Statutory Health Physicians (KBV) Chair Andreas Gassen told the RND network. “High-risk patients aren’t treated in all practices. It should generally be left up to medical colleagues to decide whether they want to require masks in their practices.”

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