Bayern Munich players take part in a training
session at the club's training area in Munich, southern Germany, on February
24, 2020 before Covid-19 floored the Bundesliga
Despite
rigid hygiene guidelines for the restart of the Bundesliga this weekend, a
leading German sports doctor has warned footballers are still at risk of
suffering "irreversible" and potentially career-ending lung damage
from the coronavirus.
With Europe's other top
leagues at least a month away from resuming, the German Football League (DFL)
has drawn up strict rules for when games restart this Saturday.
Matches will be played
behind closed doors, with only a limited number of media and officials allowed
to attend.
The key games see
second-placed Borussia Dortmund at home to Schalke 04 in Saturday's derby and
leaders Bayern Munich, who are four points clear, visiting Union Berlin on
Sunday.
Players
have been told to limit contact, even on the pitch, and must avoid pre-match
handshakes and hugs to celebrate goals.
The
DFL says while no plan could ever be "100 percent safe", the
guidelines aim to create a playing environment with a low,
"medically-justifiable risk".
However, professor Wilhelm
Bloch, from the German Sports University in Cologne, warns that contracting the
coronavirus has the potential to end a player's career.
"There is a risk that
top athletes may lose their level of performance and never regain it,"
Bloch told AFP in a phone interview.
"Generally, the
physical makeup, immune system and cardiovascular system of elite athletes
means that the risk to them is low.
"However,
we do not know at this time whether even minor infections, or even mild
symptoms, do not cause damage, such as minor scarring of the lungs after an
inflammation.
"This damage may be irreversible, or may last a very long
time before the body repairs it.
"We've
already had players infected in Europe and we'll soon know if they recover
their full potential."
- Increased injury risk -
Bloch
said it is near impossible to estimate what the risk is to footballers in
Germany, which currently has 172,239 recorded cases of the virus and over 7,700
deaths.
"Players are not in
total quarantine, they are with their families, even if they have been
instructed to limit contact," he said.
"And there are also
risks during matches.
"They
will all be tested, but not all the coronavirus tests work perfectly. There is
a relatively large margin of error."
The
sports doctor says another concern is injuries to players, given their lack of
match fitness since the league stopped in mid-March.
"Obviously, the
players are not optimally prepared," Bloch said, with clubs only resuming
full team training last week.
"Depending on the
degree of preparation, the risk of injury increases.
"We can expect that
the players will be more prone to injuries.
"We will see muscle
injuries, but also injuries to the musculoskeletal system and tendons.
"You
can't compare it with the start of the season.
"At the beginning of the season they normally have a very
intensive training period, then a short break so that the body can regenerate,
and then they attack the season.
"Now,
that hasn't been possible for all the teams."
Bloch also
wonders how players can be expected to throw themselves into tackles after
weeks of being told to observe social distancing.
"I'm not
a psychologist, it's difficult to assess, but I think it's going to be a
difficult transition and it won't necessarily be good for their
performance," said Bloch.
"It's
also going to be one of those factors that you have to consider and one of the
risk factors for injury."


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