The German Bundesliga will go back behind closed doors from Nov. 2 for the rest of the month as the country’s government combats the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic with several restrictions to public life.
At a virtual meeting on Wednesday, German chancellor Angela Merkel and the 16 heads of the German federal states decided amongst other measures that all professional sports including the Bundesliga must be played behind closed doors.
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However, with restrictions not due to come in until Monday, that means this weekend’s Bundesliga fixtures, including Arminia Bielefeld vs. Borussia Dortmund can go ahead with some fans present.
Heading into the season, German clubs were allowed to bring back up to 20% of their fans if local health authorities approved their hygiene concepts and infection numbers remained below a seven-day incidence of 35
On Oct. 3,Dortmund welcomed 11,500 spectators to their 81,000 capacity Westfalenstadion as they beat SC Freiburg 4-0. This remained the highest single attendance in the Bundesliga with new infections putting the brakes on further records.
Other clubs, like Champions League winners Bayern Munich, were not able to have any fans at all due to a high number of cases in the region.
Bayern CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenige suggested that the “Bundesliga could collapse in its entirety” should the league be suspended again — but the league is avoiding that scenario for now.
“If the Bundesliga is suspended again, if we are not allowed to play even without fans, bit-by-bit several clubs would have to declare bankruptcy,” Rummenigge told SID on Tuesday. “And as a result, the Bundesliga would be in danger of collapsing entirely.”
Several clubs like Schalke, Werder Bremen and Mainz have said the coronavirus pandemic has put them in a bad place financially.