Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - May 17, 2020, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A12
SPORTS
SPORTS EDITOR: STEVE LYONS 204-697-7285 ? SPORTS@FREEPRESS.MB.CA ? WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
SUNDAY MAY 17, 2020
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B ERLIN - Erling Haaland scored the Bundesliga's first goal in more than two months
and then celebrated.
Alone.
The 19-year-old's Borussia Dort-
mund teammates stayed away, mindful
of the strict hygiene measures amid
the coronavirus pandemic, as Germa-
ny's soccer season resumed in unprec-
edented conditions on Saturday.
Dortmund beat Schalke 4-0 in the
first Ruhr derby to be played in an
empty stadium. Calls and shouts from
coaching staff and players, and the
thud of the sanitized ball being kicked,
reverberated around the mainly de-
serted stands.
Players had been warned to keep
their emotions in check, and to desist
from spitting, handshakes and hugging
with the games keenly watched by
the rest of the soccer world hoping to
restart their own leagues.
Team staff, and players who didn't
start, wore masks. Substitutes took
their positions in the stands, rather
than beside the field, while balls and
seats were disinfected.
Haaland celebrated his 10th goal
in nine Bundesliga games with a
restrained dance as his teammates
stayed back.
"It's hard," midfielder Julian Brandt
said. "But that's the way it is now. We
try to stick to the rules."
Brandt set up Raphael Guerreiro
before the break and Thorgan Hazard
after it. Hazard celebrated alone in
front of the Westfalenstadion's south
terrace, where normally the club's
"Yellow Wall" of almost 25,000 fervent
fans would be standing.
"It felt strange, also for the players.
You could see that with the celebra-
tions," Dortmund team co-ordinator
Sebastian Kehl said.
Haaland set up Guerreiro to seal
the result as Dortmund cut the gap
on leader Bayern Munich to a point.
Bayern is due to play at Union Berlin
today.
Schalke became the first team to
make five substitutions in a Bundesliga
game in a new temporary measure
allowed in the league, but they couldn't
change the outcome. Dortmund's play-
ers celebrated in front of the empty
south terrace afterward.
"To applaud all our fans who were
watching on TV," Kehl said.
Pre-game television interviews were
conducted with long poles holding
microphones and participants keeping
their distance.
"It's quite surreal," Dortmund chief
executive Hans Joachim Watzke told
Sky TV. "I've received messages from
all over the world in the last couple
of hours that everybody is watching
and then you go through the city and
there's nothing going on."
Borussia Manchengladbach moved
third, three points behind Bayern, with
a 3-1 win at Eintracht Frankfurt in the
late game.
Also: Hertha Berlin won 3-0 at Hof-
fenheim in coach Bruno Labbadia's
first game in charge; Freiburg drew
at Leipzig 1-1; Paderborn drew at
Fortuna Dusseldorf 0-0; and Wolfsburg
won 2-1 at Augsburg, where the home
side's new coach Heiko Herrlich was
forced to watch from the stands after
breaking quarantine to buy toiletries.
Herrlich will only return after twice
testing negative for the virus.
Celebrations were muted throughout,
with only Hertha's players overstep-
ping calls for restraint.
"Goal celebrations are part of soccer.
We're tested so often I think they can
be allowed," Labbadia said in defence
of his team.
Even though the stadium contained
less than 300 people, one of them - a
camera operator behind the goal -
still managed to be hit on the head by a
wayward shot from Leipzig' Ademola
Lookman.
Leipzig was grateful to VAR for
ruling out what would have been a win-
ning injury-time goal from Freiburg's
Robin Koch.
They were the first games to be
played in the league since March 11.
Earlier Saturday, the second division
resumed with four games, also without
fans present and amid strict distancing
measures.
South Korea midfielder Lee Jae-
sung scored the division's first goal
for Holstein Kiel in a 2-2 draw at Jahn
Regensburg. He celebrated by giving
teammates fist bumps.
Goal celebrations in other games
were also marked by fist bumps and
elbow-to-elbow touching.
The game's authorities were keen to
restart the country's top two divisions
with several clubs, including Schalke,
facing severe financial difficulties
because of the suspension in play.
Numerous polls showed a growing
majority in Germany were against the
resumption of the leagues. Fans are
also critical.
"Soccer without fans is nothing,"
read a joint statement from several
Bayern Munich fan groups after the
league decided on May 7 to resume.
Cologne fans accused authorities
Saturday of prioritizing money over
people's health. A banner at Augs-
burg's game against Wolfsburg said,
"Soccer will survive, your business is
sick!"
There was criticism too from players
over health concerns and the threat of
injury with games now packed into a
tight schedule.
Players and staff have been sub-
jected to regular testing for COVID-19.
Three cases were found at Cologne,
while second-division Dynamo Dres-
den was ordered into 14 days of quar-
antine after two more positive results
brought its total to three last Saturday.
Dresden's game against Hannover
today was called off, and the team can-
not train during the quarantine period.
- The Associated Press
No fans, lonely goal celebrations, lots of sanitizer as Bundesliga resumes
REAL. LIVE. SPORTS.
CIARAN FAHEY
MARTIN MEISSNER, POOL / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Dortmund's Erling Haaland celebrates after scoring the opening goal during a Bundesliga match against Schalke 04 in Dortmund, Germany, Saturday. The Bundesliga is the first major soccer league to resume after a two-month suspension.
SASCHA SCHUERMANN/AFP POOL VIA AP
Dusseldorf players sit on a makeshift bench in the stands Saturday. Soccer balls are disinfected in Dortmund (right).
ALEXANDER HASSENSTEIN / POOL PHOTO VIA AP
A member of Holstein Kiel lifts a sign
reading 'goal' during a Bundesliga match
between Jahn Regensburg and Holstein Kiel
in Regensburg.
DORTMUND 4
SCHALKE 0
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