Premier League clubs to discuss options around Covid-19 pandemic

Premier League clubs to discuss options around Covid-19 pandemic
Liverpool 3-1 Newcastle United: No benefit to stopping the league - Jurgen Klopp on Covid

Premier League clubs will meet on Monday to discuss the escalating crisis around the coronavirus pandemic.

With nine games postponed over the past week, including five already from this weekend's 10-match fixture list, clubs want the chance to discuss the options.

Brentford boss Thomas Frank led calls for all matches to be called off until Boxing Day to enable a reset.

Some feel the break should be longer - but others such as Liverpool's Jurgen Klopp do not believe it should happen.

Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta said clubs need "clarity" about the situation.

Speaking before his side's trip to Leeds, which is one of two games still scheduled to be played on Saturday, Arteta said: "The regulators will make the decision over whether a game is played or not but we all need to understand the reasons behind it.

"We are going to have to find a way. We knew when we started the season this [Covid problems] could be a possibility and I am sure there was a Plan A, B and C.

"We have the AFCON [African Cup of Nations] as well, we know the date of the World Cup coming, so we need a flexible calendar now because this world is not the world we used to live in a few years ago. We need clarity."

The Premier League said on Thursday it intends to carry on playing matches as long as it is safe to do so.

The meeting itself will not purely be centred around matches being called off and whether there is a break or not. There are also issues around re-arranging the games that have already been postponed.

In addition, there are concerns over player release for next month's African Cup of Nations and the January World Cup qualifiers that cover every continent other than Europe.

The release of the Nations League fixtures by Uefa on Friday underlined the issues surrounding the crowded match calendar.

England play their first game in Hungary on 4 June, one week after the Champions League final on 28 May, which itself is a week after the final round of Premier League fixtures on 22 May.

With European matches, EFL Cup semi-finals, the FA Cup fifth round and replays for earlier rounds, there are only two completely clear midweeks until the end of the season.

Those midweeks were supposed to be used for matches that had to be moved because teams had reached the latter stages of domestic cup competitions whose dates clashed with league games.

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