Professional football players in Spain will be tested this week so they can start training again for the first time in nearly two months.
Basic training has been allowed to resume in Spain on Monday after the government eased some of the lockdown measures that had been in place since mid-March because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Spanish league players are expected to get back on the field later in the week after they are tested for COVID-19 and after the clubs’ training facilities are properly prepared and disinfected. The facilities will have to be inspected to make sure they comply to the cleaning protocols established by local authorities.
All players, coaches and club employees who are going to be involved in the initial training phase will have to be tested two days before the individual practices can begin.
The tests will reportedly begin as early as Tuesday, and the league wants them to be conducted daily after the individual training sessions begin.
The league wants a
period of training of about a month before it can resume with matches in empty stadiums sometime in June. There is no set date yet for the league's resumption.
Players will be allowed to use the teams’ training facilities but won’t be allowed to interact with teammates in the initial phase. They will travel individually to the facilities and must arrive already wearing their training uniforms.
No more than six players will be allowed on the field at the same time, and they must stay “the greatest distance possible” from each other. The use of equipment should be limited and coaches must supervise players from a distance.
Players must wear gloves and masks until going onto the pitch, and only one or two players can share the gym at a time. The league protocol, which was prepared by the medical staff of some first-division clubs, recommends that players — and those living with them — should not leave their homes other than to go to practice. It says each club must establish a food-delivery system for first-team players.