The Premier League Restart Will not Be Football as We Know It

Borussia Dortmund playing Bayern Munich in a behind-closed-doors Bundesliga match on 26 May: a sign of things to come in the Premier League. Photograph: Federico Gambarini/Getty Images
Borussia Dortmund playing Bayern Munich in a behind-closed-doors Bundesliga match on 26 May: a sign of things to come in the Premier League. Photograph: Federico Gambarini/Getty Images
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The Premier League Restart Will not Be Football as We Know It

Borussia Dortmund playing Bayern Munich in a behind-closed-doors Bundesliga match on 26 May: a sign of things to come in the Premier League. Photograph: Federico Gambarini/Getty Images
Borussia Dortmund playing Bayern Munich in a behind-closed-doors Bundesliga match on 26 May: a sign of things to come in the Premier League. Photograph: Federico Gambarini/Getty Images

Football and its followers can start to cheer up a bit now that there is a Premier League restart date to look forward to, though no one could be foolish enough to imagine normality will return on 17 June.

Cynics are already pointing out, for a start, that on that date the two outstanding games in hand are going to be played first, so that if anything goes wrong all the clubs in the Premier League will at least have played the same number of matches should curtailment of the season suddenly reappear as an option.

Perhaps that is taking far too gloomy a view when the Bundesliga is already up and running, without spectators and, perhaps more important, without any police insistence on neutral venues. We have all become wearily resigned over the years to the police running the football calendar for reasons of crowd control, but if they are now saying empty grounds represent an unsupervisable threat to public safety it is quite a development, especially at a time when the nation’s pubs and bars are also standing silent and unused.

Unless football fans in the south of England have become too timid, trustworthy or tangential to cause any concern, the apparent northern bias detectable in the fixtures the police have asked to be moved probably has more to do with Liverpool being on the verge of a first title in 30 years.

Some sort of public partying can only be expected when that achievement is confirmed, as even if only half the remaining games can be played no one is going to argue with the right of Jürgen Klopp’s team to be called champions. A 25-point lead at the top of the Premier League sounds as ridiculous now as it did when games were suspended, and though many a joke has been made about Covid-19 and title number 19, Liverpool have been so demonstrably superior to the rest of the division this season that almost everyone has sympathy for the way their regal progress was halted by factors beyond their control.

The situation at the top of the Premier League is as uncomplicated as it is possible to be at this stage of the season, and though the battle for fourth place and the Europa League positions promises to be quite lively, at that end of the table no one is going to face financial calamity through fixtures being completed in compromised circumstances.

It is a different story at the bottom, where the clubs under threat of relegation must have enormous, if private, misgivings about playing out the season without spectators. Only a couple of weeks ago Watford were successfully arguing that the plan to play games at neutral venues would be to the detriment of clubs who were relying on their home fixtures for the points necessary to survive. No sooner had that fight been won than news arrived from Germany that without spectators, home advantage does not appear to count for much anyway. Of the 27 games played in Germany before this weekend, only five resulted in home wins, fewer than 20%.

By contrast, 11 matches or just over 40% resulted in victory for the away side, some by thumping scores. From this (admittedly limited) evidence, home advantage has little to do with familiarity with the dressing rooms or the nap of the turf and everything to do with the presence of a vocal and partisan crowd, whether urging the home players on to greater heights of performance or intimidating opponents and perhaps the referee.

Who knew? It makes sense when you think about it, but who has ever thought about it before? It has also come to light from the German experience that games played behind closed doors tend to proceed more efficiently, with the ball in play for a greater proportion of the game than is normally the case.

Without a crowd there is evidently no point playing to the gallery or putting pressure on the referee to change his mind. Players just get on with the game, quite possibly because it has suddenly become more of a contractual duty than a means of self-expression. Even goals as exquisite as the one scored by Bayern Munich’s Joshua Kimmich against Dortmund are not celebrated or savored for long; when the symbiosis between performers and spectators is missing so is the sense of theatre.

Football does not normally contain pauses for introspection; the whole point is that once the ball is set rolling it is not intended to stop. A three-month mid-season hiatus is wholly unprecedented and it is not clear how everyone will react, or indeed if everyone will react in the same way.

The possibility of Liverpool taking their foot off the pedal once the title has been clinched or mid-table teams with nothing to play for phoning in their performances to get the season over as quickly as possible existed before the lockdown. Should anything similar happen in the coming weeks it would be nothing new, except that at the moment everything is new.

This is not quite football as we know it, and to judge by Bundesliga results the season that starts again in artificial circumstances does not follow the form lines of the chunk of the program already completed.

There can be little doubt that what the Premier League is proposing represents the fairest way of concluding the season – everyone has the chance to save themselves on the pitch – though there is going to be more of the dogfight than usual about this year’s relegation scrap, and that’s without even considering all the justifiable calls from hard-pressed EFL clubs for future parachute payments to be drastically reduced.

(The Guardian)



Hamilton Eyes Dream Ferrari Start as F1 Revs Up in Melbourne

FILE PHOTO: Formula One F1 - Ferrari presents new driving pairing Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc to the public - Milan, Italy - March 6, 2025 Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton during the presentation REUTERS/Claudia Greco/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Formula One F1 - Ferrari presents new driving pairing Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc to the public - Milan, Italy - March 6, 2025 Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton during the presentation REUTERS/Claudia Greco/File Photo
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Hamilton Eyes Dream Ferrari Start as F1 Revs Up in Melbourne

FILE PHOTO: Formula One F1 - Ferrari presents new driving pairing Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc to the public - Milan, Italy - March 6, 2025 Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton during the presentation REUTERS/Claudia Greco/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Formula One F1 - Ferrari presents new driving pairing Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc to the public - Milan, Italy - March 6, 2025 Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton during the presentation REUTERS/Claudia Greco/File Photo

Lewis Hamilton will look to lay down an immediate marker against world champion Max Verstappen when the Briton makes his highly anticipated Ferrari debut at the season-opening Australian Grand Prix this week.

The former Mercedes ace Hamilton is bidding for a record eighth world title and his first since 2020 after being outshone by the Dutchman and his imperious Red Bull team over the intervening years.

A bombshell move to Ferrari after a glorious 12-year spell at Mercedes has rejuvenated the 40-year-old, who is eager to apply the lessons learned from 162 laps of testing at Bahrain last month to race conditions.

"I'm so excited to get to the first race in Melbourne. I can't wait to go racing with them," Hamilton said of Ferrari.

"The passion here is like nothing you've ever seen.

"They've got absolutely every ingredient they need to win a world championship and it's just about putting all the pieces together."

Hamilton has tasted victory twice before at the fast and bumpy Albert Park circuit with McLaren and Mercedes, but not since 2015.

Ferrari have fared better, winning four of the last six Australian races including in 2024 when Carlos Sainz, the man Hamilton replaced, took the chequered flag ahead of teammate Charles Leclerc.

Verstappen started from pole but failed to finish in Melbourne last year, limping out with smoke billowing from a brake fire.

It was a minor aberration for the Dutchman, who went on to clinch a fourth world title with two races to spare ahead of McLaren's Lando Norris.

The 27-year-old Verstappen is now bidding to become only the second driver behind Michael Schumacher to win five championships in a row, AFP reported.

Verstappen has been keen to play down expectations, telling Dutch media: "I don't think we can fight for the win already in Melbourne.

"If you look at the lap times, then I think McLaren is the favorite," Verstappen added, referring to Bahrain testing.

"On our side, not everything went completely smoothly, but on the other hand we have some ideas on how to improve."

He is now partnered at Red Bull by Liam Lawson after the under-performing Sergio Perez was axed, with the New Zealander one of six drivers making their full season debut in Australia.

Australian eyes will be on Jack Doohan, the son of five-time MotoGP world champion Mick, who makes his home bow with Alpine.

The other four are Italian teenager Andrea Kimi Antonelli, who took Hamilton's Mercedes seat, Briton Oliver Bearman (Haas), Brazil's Gabriel Bortoleto (Sauber) and France's Isack Hadjar (Racing Bulls).

Verstappen's caution follows Norris throwing down the gauntlet last year when he led McLaren to their first team title since 1998.

As expected, McLaren were rapid in Bahrain with Norris and Australian teammate Oscar Piastri keen for statement drives this week.

"This circuit has been good to us in the past and hopefully we've carried our momentum from 2024 into this year," said Britain's Norris.

"We had a productive test but we won't know where we stand until qualifying on Saturday."

Norris cautioned that he expects teams other than McLaren, Red Bull, Ferrari and Mercedes to be more competitive this season.

"I think this should be a very exciting season with a lot of close racing. There's going to be a lot of competition."

Melbourne is back in its traditional position as the opening race of the season for the first time in five years, with organizers expecting more than 450,000 fans through the Albert Park turnstiles.

The city had held the first grand prix almost every year since the Australian race moved from Adelaide in 1996, but has not done so since 2019 after the Covid pandemic led to Bahrain taking over.