Italy's Serie A gets green light for June 20 restart

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Juventus' Cristiano Ronaldo arrives at the club's Continassa training ground after a quarantine in Turin, Italy, on May 19, 2020. (Xinhua)

Nearly 12 weeks after Italy's top football league played its final games before the national coronavirus lockdown entered into force, the Italian government gave Serie A the OK to restart play on June 20.

The decision, announced by Minister of Sport Vincenzo Spadafora after less than an hour of virtual discussions with officials from the Italian Football Federation and representatives of Serie A, players, coaches, and referees, comes after weeks of contentious talks and widespread media speculation on the topic.

"Italy is reopening [and] it is correct that the football season should restart as well," Spadafora told reporters.

Earlier this month, 16 of 20 Serie A teams voted to restart play on June 13, with four teams voting for a June 20 start. But that vote was contingent on health and safety protocols for players and fans and in the end, the latter date was selected because it took so long to agree to those protocols.

The agree-to rules mean teams will play in front of nearly empty stands and widespread COVID-19 testing for players and officials. If any player tests positive for the coronavirus, everyone who came in contact with that player will immediately be quarantined.

Other football leagues in Italy, including lower divisions like Serie B and Serie C as well as the Serie A for women, will also restart, though at a later date.

Spadafora warned that if data on the coronavirus infection rate in Italy, which has improved dramatically since mid-April, worsens, the season could be halted again. 

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