Yorkshire Post 24/7/21 Football in need of clarity over Covid passports and return of fans to stadiums
It will hopefully be the first time in three football seasons a campaign is played from start to finish in front of full crowds, but 2020-21 is likely to kick off amidst uncertainty about exactly who is able to attend beyond the opening games.
By Stuart Rayner
This week Parliament went on its summer holidays until
September, but not before Prime Minister Boris Johnson dropped a bombshell
about what might be coming on its return.
On Monday, he floated the possibility that only those fully
vaccinated against Covid-19 will be allowed into nightclubs “and other venues
where large crowds gather”. It remains to be seen how that definition will
apply to sporting events, whether the Government has changed its mind by the
time comes to vote it into law, or if it passes despite some opposition.
The football authorities who have advocated “Covid
passports” to allow the return of capacity crowds, and/or its clubs must decide
whether it is better to pre-empt something which may not happen or risk
changing during the season. New legislation in September will put an extra
burden and potentially cost at short notice on clubs to properly check “Covid
passports”.
The Government’s schedule cannot be geared around football
and its decision to bar those not fully vaccinated has been scheduled for late
September so all adults have the opportunity to receive a second jab plus the
14 days for it to take full effect.
Supporters who were not fully vaccinated were allowed to
attend this summer’s Wembley European Championship games if they could provide
proof of a negative lateral flow test within 48 hours of kick-off but this week
the Prime Minister unexpectedly warned: “By the end of September we are
planning to make full vaccination the condition of entry to nightclubs and
other venues where large crowds gather. Proof of a negative test will no longer
be enough.”
It could put unvaccinated season ticket-holders in a
difficult situation, facing the prospect of having their seat effectively taken
away two months into the campaign. The situation for those unable to be
vaccinated on medical grounds is unclear at this stage.
Meanwhile, the new Football League season starts on August
7, with Leeds United’s Premier League campaign kicking off at Manchester United
a week later.
Sheffield Wednesday and Huddersfield Town play a League Cup
first round tie at Hillsborough on August 1. Parliament is not due back from
its summer recess until September 6, so no new law can be put forward before
then. Some Conservative MPs are expected to vote against, though it is far too
early to say if the proposals will be defeated, or even what exactly they will
be.
The progress of the infection rate, hospitalisations and
deaths are likely to have a bearing and in a new and ever-changing situation,
the Government has certainly shown itself open to changing its mind.
For now it has been suggested the definition of “large
crowds” may extend to all matches at grounds with capacities in excess of
20,000. The definition in step three of the roadmap out of lockdown was 16,000
capacities.
Huddersfield Town, Leeds, Middlesbrough, Sheffields United
and Wednesday all play in stadia which hold more than 20,000. Despite average
gates between 11,000 and just over 14,000 in those 2019-20 league matches open
to the public, so do Hull City, Barnsley and Bradford City.
Whilst being sat in the open makes transmission of the virus
much more difficult, Government hesitancy about opening up grounds has been
more around the numbers travelling to games on public transport and congested
concourses.
Yorkshire clubs are asking spectators attending pre-season
friendlies to follow guidelines which go beyond the current laws, and it seems
likely they will be expected to continue to do so to host full capacities for
the first time since February/March 2019.
The Football League is expected to provide clubs with
guidance before the season starts whilst the Premier League is understood to
have been in talks even before Monday to look at a league-wide passport scheme
to start as soon as the new campaign does.
In April, the two leagues, the Football Association and
other sporting bodies wrote to the major political parties supporting “a Covid
certification process” to allow fans back into grounds but with the proviso
that: “This process must ensure that everyone can access stadia and must
include arrangements that would verify a negative Covid test or an antibody
test or vaccination certification.”