This page contains affiliate links. When you purchase through the links provided, we may earn a commission.
Sergio Ramos, Lionel MessiGetty composite

La Liga clubs to return to training after government gives permission following coronavirus outbreak

La Liga clubs will return to training this week after the Spanish government gave permission following weeks of strict coronavirus-enforced lockdown in the country.

Players in the fully professional divisions of club football in Spain - the top two tiers - will be allowed to train alone at club facilities once they have been tested for Covid-19 by club staff.

The return to training comes after Spain was one of the worst hit countries in Europe by the coronavirus pandemic, however it raises hopes that the 2019-20 football season will be able to be concluded.

Article continues below

A statement from La Liga said that a return to full training is planned over a four-week period, subject to a de-escalation process established by the government as it looks to ease lockdown restrictions.

"This crisis has had a profound impact on all of us. The return of football is a sign that society is progressing towards the new normal. It will also bring back an element of life that people in Spain and around the world know and love,” said Javier Tebas, the president of La Liga.

"People’s health is paramount, so we have a comprehensive protocol to safeguard the health of everyone involved as we work to restart La Liga. Circumstances are unprecedented, but we hope to start playing again in June and finish our 2019-20 season this summer.”

Leagues across Europe are returning to training as they attempt to return to normal, although some - such as France's Ligue 1 and the Eredivisie in the Netherlands - have abandoned the 2019-20 campaign following government laws banning mass gatherings until later in the year.

Serie A clubs in Italy returned to training in small groups on Monday, while Bundesliga players in Germany have been training for a number of weeks in the hope the league can resume later this month - although that has been thrown into doubt by 10 positive tests for coronavirus across clubs in the top two divisions.

President of Spain Pedro Sanchez, meanwhile, has lent his support to the return of football in the country, with the general public allowed out to exercise as of last Saturday following seven weeks of strict lockdown.

"We hope that football will soon be back, La Liga and the Federation will decide that, but they already have our permission to begin individual training in team sports," he said.

"Of course, we will be watching it on television before we go back to the stadiums. We will move back a step if we see that we have gone too fast. Revising any of the phases would not constitute failure here." 

Advertisement