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COVID scare: England at risk from Euro 2020 euphoria

July 09, 2021 13:13 IST

Although British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has delayed the full reopening of England's economy until July 19, a week after the final, people can still gather in bars and pubs.
Jubilant fans were pictured packing bars, streets and even clambering on top of a London bus in the aftermath of England's extra-time 2-1 victory over Denmark, with fan-zones highlighted by some as a particular risk for transmission.

Fans celebrate in London after England's 2-1 win over Denmark in the Euro 2020 semi-final on Wednesday 

IMAGE: Fans celebrate in London after England's 2-1 win over Denmark in the Euro 2020 semi-final on Wednesday. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

"Football's coming home," is the chant of England soccer fans at this year's Euro 2020 tournament, but with it may come COVID-19.

England face Italy on Sunday in the final at London's Wembley Stadium, which has already hosted two semi-finals over two days this week with crowds of around 60,000 people.

And while Wednesday's semi-final victory over Denmark was greeted with jubilation, England is facing a new wave of COVID-19 cases, fuelled by a combination of a highly contagious variant and its emergence from a third lockdown.

 

Italy has also seen coronavirus cases picking up, and epidemiologists in both countries warn that Euro 2020 might fuel its spread among younger, mainly male, adults.

"It's that demographic, those football-loving, male, predominantly, individuals of a particular age group that we're now seeing a surge in," Denis Kinane, an immunologist and co-founder of testing company Cignpost Diagnostics told Reuters.

"So, just as we unlock socially ... we're actually going to have a spike," Kinane said, adding that the virus could spread to family members.

Imperial College has found a quadrupling of COVID-19 in England in the last month, with women 30% less likely to test positive due to differences in social mixing which could, at least in part, be driven by Euro 2020.

"The most plausible explanation is that men are having more frequent close contacts," Steven Riley, Professor of Infectious Disease Dynamics at the London university, told Reuters.

Germany has queried Europe's soccer governing body UEFA's move to allow bigger crowds in stadiums as the tournament has gone on, while the World Health Organization (WHO) has flagged the importance of looking beyond stadiums to pubs and bars where people gather for matches.

London's Wembley matches are "pilot events" which allow for larger crowds where fans must test negative for COVID-19 or be fully vaccinated against the coronavirus.

Doctors battling record numbers of COVID-19 deaths in St. Petersburg were worried when soccer fans gathered for the quarter-final between Spain and Switzerland.

England fans celebrate at the Wembley Stadium on Wednesday. 'I think the stadiums are being correctly managed ... (but) the fact that we've got the whole nation now celebrating -- and rightly so -- it's scary'  

IMAGE: England fans celebrate at the Wembley Stadium on Wednesday. 'I think the stadiums are being correctly managed ... (but) the fact that we've got the whole nation now celebrating -- and rightly so -- it's scary.' Photograph: Chris J Ratcliffe/Getty Images

Although British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has delayed the full reopening of England's economy until July 19, a week after the final, people can still gather in bars and pubs.

Before the semi-final, Johnson urged fans to support England "enthusiastically, but in a responsible way."

For a nation swept up in footballing fervour after 55 years since England's last major final and 16 months of restrictions, politicians are loathe to dampen the celebrations.

Jubilant fans were pictured packing bars, streets and even clambering on top of a London bus in the aftermath of England's extra-time 2-1 victory over Denmark, with fan-zones highlighted by some as a particular risk for transmission.

"I think the stadiums are being correctly managed ... (but) the fact that we've got the whole nation now celebrating -- and rightly so -- it's scary," said Keith Still, visiting professor of Crowd Science at Suffolk University, told Reuters.

In Italy, Carlo Signorelli, professor of Hygiene and Public Health at San Raffaele University in Milan, said masks could stop the spread of droplets among singing or chanting fans.

"We've had them for a long time, so putting them on for one more evening won't be the end of the world," he told Italy's La Repubblica newspaper.

Source: REUTERS
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