Change at Barnham
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Will Brighton deny Alexis Mac Allister and Steven Alzate's return to South America during the international break if selected in March?
Macca's Argentina have World Cup qualifying games v Uruguay and Brazil, and Alzate's Colombia have WC games against Brazil and Paraguay.
Part of an article from David Ornstein in The Athletic:
Growing belief Premier League clubs will clamp down on international travel next month
New COVID-19 variants have already impacted football as countries close their borders to international travel and some European ties in the club competitions have been moved to neutral venues. But this particular issue could become pertinent again ahead of the March international fixtures.
Last week, FIFA extended the exemption that means clubs do not have to release players where there is a mandatory quarantine period of five days or more on their return. And The Athletic has been told there is a growing belief that Premier League clubs have a case for telling FIFA players will not be released next month on a much wider basis.
The UK’s current rules mean anyone returning from a “red list” country, such as Portugal, all of South America and parts of southern Africa, will need to undergo a 10-day quarantine in a hotel. There is no exemption for elite sports stars.
With the likes of Colombia, Brazil and Argentina, for example, involved in World Cup qualifiers, there are concerns that players could travel abroad and then not be allowed back into the UK, leaving them unable to perform the work they are contracted to do. This could impact a host of clubs, including Liverpool (Alisson, Roberto Firmino), Manchester City (Gabriel Jesus) and Everton (James Rodriguez, Richarlison, Allan).
While it has not yet been discussed at Premier League meetings, clubs have raised it privately and there is hope the top-flight clubs’ stance would be backed by the FA.
One Premier League executive added that every club wants to avoid giving themselves a disadvantage this season and so if one club denies permission to travel, they all will. Another club insider told The Athletic they are hoping to know in the next week whether they can pull players out based on travel advice.
There are also serious fears that players could bring back new strains of COVID-19 from international duty — despite many clubs paying for private jets to transport their players, which they fear could prove to be incubators for the virus.
For the full article:
https://theathletic.co.uk/2383850/2021/02/15/ornstein-mourinho-spurs-konsa-villa-england-wolves/
Macca's Argentina have World Cup qualifying games v Uruguay and Brazil, and Alzate's Colombia have WC games against Brazil and Paraguay.
Part of an article from David Ornstein in The Athletic:
Growing belief Premier League clubs will clamp down on international travel next month
New COVID-19 variants have already impacted football as countries close their borders to international travel and some European ties in the club competitions have been moved to neutral venues. But this particular issue could become pertinent again ahead of the March international fixtures.
Last week, FIFA extended the exemption that means clubs do not have to release players where there is a mandatory quarantine period of five days or more on their return. And The Athletic has been told there is a growing belief that Premier League clubs have a case for telling FIFA players will not be released next month on a much wider basis.
The UK’s current rules mean anyone returning from a “red list” country, such as Portugal, all of South America and parts of southern Africa, will need to undergo a 10-day quarantine in a hotel. There is no exemption for elite sports stars.
With the likes of Colombia, Brazil and Argentina, for example, involved in World Cup qualifiers, there are concerns that players could travel abroad and then not be allowed back into the UK, leaving them unable to perform the work they are contracted to do. This could impact a host of clubs, including Liverpool (Alisson, Roberto Firmino), Manchester City (Gabriel Jesus) and Everton (James Rodriguez, Richarlison, Allan).
While it has not yet been discussed at Premier League meetings, clubs have raised it privately and there is hope the top-flight clubs’ stance would be backed by the FA.
One Premier League executive added that every club wants to avoid giving themselves a disadvantage this season and so if one club denies permission to travel, they all will. Another club insider told The Athletic they are hoping to know in the next week whether they can pull players out based on travel advice.
There are also serious fears that players could bring back new strains of COVID-19 from international duty — despite many clubs paying for private jets to transport their players, which they fear could prove to be incubators for the virus.
For the full article:
https://theathletic.co.uk/2383850/2021/02/15/ornstein-mourinho-spurs-konsa-villa-england-wolves/