Coronavirus: Football Discussion Thread

Surely those are just known (i.e. positively tested) infections, there will be many more that are asymptomatic and untested.
Randomised tests. They wont test the whole population. They'll do a sample and from that make a prediction. I'll go back and watch the episode on the I player again and get some more details

Edit: There's a link here: https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopula...aviruscovid19infectionsurvey/england10may2020

The link states that it's between 76,000 to 225,000 with the 136,000 as the most likely estimate.
 
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''Until we know the actual number of people who have or have had the virus''
thank you
And until we know, the death rate is 1 in 7. The true position is we will never know exact numbers in either category but as a FACT using the most reliable measure , my original numbers stand
 
If they cannot find a vaccine, it seems some on here want football to be null and void, forever.
I am going back to work, as safely as possible, but not without risk. Those that live off the state can stay at home, until that money runs out.
At some stage we have to get the economy going again, that will mean death for some. Might be me over 60, self employed.

Some Footballers who want to ,could retire now and still be comfortable, Sterling, Silva, Mahrez etc, so they could decide to stop playing. If they are really worried, and i would have no issue with that. I wouldn't work either if i wasn't potless .
It may not be in june, but later, as soon as reasonably safe. I also think all those people who say they will never watch football again, if there are no packed stands are the guys being selfish.
Drugs will eventually mean the situation improves but the virus is not going to disappear.
Everyone , young footballers included will need to adapt. They will be more at risk at their partys and sleeping with hookers than on the playing field.
 
I've heard a very valid perspective that applies itself well to this topic.

For those who think it's ok for (a few or many) people to die a slow and agonising death, so that they can be entertained by a competitive endeavour. Why not campaign for the revival of Roman style arenas and feed people to tormented wild animals?

Or is it easier for you to pointedly overlook the human cost of your fun when the victims (innocent people spending weeks dying in agony with a pipe down their throat into their bleeding lungs), are hidden away in isolation wards so you don't have to look at the human cost of your pleasures?
 
If they cannot find a vaccine, it seems some on here want football to be null and void, forever.
I am going back to work, as safely as possible, but not without risk. Those that live off the state can stay at home, until that money runs out.
At some stage we have to get the economy going again, that will mean death for some. Might be me over 60, self employed.

I'm going to put a stop to this idea that anyone who disagrees with rushing back somehow doesn't want the economy to recover. I am opposed to it for the opposite reason: there is no way you can have 100k+ people dying in a six month period without it ruining your economy, and a second spike will be worse in the long term for the economy than spending a few more weeks in isolation making sure we have test, trace and tracking facilities in place. This positioning of economy vs health is a death cult, pure, naked ideology, and it's a binary that doesn't exist. By rushing back, we are putting both health and the economy in danger. It's not an either/or.
 
I've heard a very valid perspective that applies itself well to this topic.

For those who think it's ok for (a few or many) people to die a slow and agonising death, so that they can be entertained by a competitive endeavour. Why not campaign for the revival of Roman style arenas and feed people to tormented wild animals?

Or is it easier for you to pointedly overlook the human cost of your fun when the victims (innocent people spending weeks dying in agony with a pipe down their throat into their bleeding lungs), are hidden away in isolation wards so you don't have to look at the human cost of your pleasures?
Well who can argue with that !
Brilliantly put ..
 
I bet black players won't be happy playing, as black people seem more prone to the virus for some reason
 
I'm going to put a stop to this idea that anyone who disagrees with rushing back somehow doesn't want the economy to recover. I am opposed to it for the opposite reason: there is no way you can have 100k+ people dying in a six month period without it ruining your economy, and a second spike will be worse in the long term for the economy than spending a few more weeks in isolation making sure we have test, trace and tracking facilities in place. This positioning of economy vs health is a death cult, pure, naked ideology, and it's a binary that doesn't exist. By rushing back, we are putting both health and the economy in danger. It's not an either/or.

I didn't say rush back.
We always have 100 k dieing in a six month period.
10 million unemployed will lead to an immeasurable number of related deaths.
Test and track will be in place when football begins.
A second spike will not be the fault of football, it will be because people cannot control themselves.

Garden centres opened today,
 
I didn't say rush back.
We always have 100 k dieing in a six month period.
10 million unemployed will lead to an immeasurable number of related deaths.
Test and track will be in place when football begins.
A second spike will not be the fault of football, it will be because people cannot control themselves.

Garden centres opened today,

You seem to be arguing slightly different things with me, so I am going to be clear in laying out my position.

- The UK is currently not in a position to be opening up it's economy in the manner it is doing, Garden Centres included. If we'd acted sooner we might be, but we didn't so we are not. Once testing, tracing and tracking is in place, and community infections are down, we might be. Football is part of that. Until those are in place - not predictions that it will be, when it is, and is successfully running, like in Korea and Germany - then any opening of the economy will take us back to square one, damaging the economy in the process.
- The economy isn't in a recession because people should be getting on with things or getting back to work, it's in a recession because that is a very natural reaction to a once in a century global pandemic. You can't have infinite growth forever. We would be better positioned if we hadn't had a decade of austerity, but here we are. For the economy to recover, counter-intuitively, we shouldn't be rushing people back to work.
- I agree, the results of the pandemic will have knock-on efffects in terms of broader health, mental and physical. But shrugging our shoulders and pulling up our sleeves is not the best way to address that.
- I don't think it is possible for us to finish the season, given the above conditions, before July or August. I believe football is a middling priority right now. I think we might be able to play part of the new season behind closed doors, if we get to grips with things in the next 2 months. There would be ways of making things fairer, like possibly seeding teams or whatever, that everyone in the league and beyond will be able to agree to.
 
I'm going to put a stop to this idea that anyone who disagrees with rushing back somehow doesn't want the economy to recover. I am opposed to it for the opposite reason: there is no way you can have 100k+ people dying in a six month period without it ruining your economy, and a second spike will be worse in the long term for the economy than spending a few more weeks in isolation making sure we have test, trace and tracking facilities in place. This positioning of economy vs health is a death cult, pure, naked ideology, and it's a binary that doesn't exist. By rushing back, we are putting both health and the economy in danger. It's not an either/or.
I like your arguments but have you thought that the second spike maybe a more fundamental wave that hits the northern latitudes in the Winter? I am sure that there are parts of society that just want to ride it out and don't really care about the loss of life. I think you assume that they are controlling and dictating events now but what if it's actually UK science who have sound reasons for wanting to loosen the lockdown? I don't know this, but I have come across some scientists who argue that in the Summer months the UK should cycle social distancing on and off so that more people become immune with the aim of creating a bulwark against a 2nd wave.

We are in the dark as ever, but as ever the only way to shine any light on this is to question.
 
I like your arguments but have you thought that the second spike maybe a more fundamental wave that hits the northern latitudes in the Winter? I am sure that there are parts of society that just want to ride it out and don't really care about the loss of life. I think you assume that they are controlling and dictating events now but what if it's actually UK science who have sound reasons for wanting to loosen the lockdown? I don't know this, but I have come across some scientists who argue that in the Summer months the UK should cycle social distancing on and off so that more people become immune with the aim of creating a bulwark against a 2nd wave.

We are in the dark as ever, but as ever the only way to shine any light on this is to question.

I think the second spike is due in 2-3 weeks, with the lock down we've just had reinforced, let alone winter, but I'll happily, happily be back here and front up to being wrong if I'm wrong. To your later point, if we are back to herd immunity then I'd like the UK Government to be honest with us about it. I trust the WHO and all the other people who say that aiming for this, with this strain of coronavirus, is tantamount to letting half a million people die, which from a purely economic viewpoint would make the depression we are about to have look like a socially distanced walk in the park.

I'm not like a lot of people here, I'd love football back, I'll be watching the German football this weekend, and I'd happily take Liverpool, who are fair winners, winning the league if we got a punt at Europe and the cup (and more importantly, I'd take Liverpool winning this league and the next 100 if it meant no more deaths and being able to go out and have some beers with my mates over the summer). Just from everything I've read, I don't think we are there yet, and decisions that are being made now will make this more difficult in the future. And I think because of mistakes we made early on, I don't think we will be there till at least August. And for all of the talk of re-starting this season then, taking a hit on lost revenues for 10 games is much more preferable than taking the hit on a whole new season.

But I'm no expert, I hope I'm wrong, but that's where I'm at. But regardless, I just find the framing of economy vs health dangerous, because it's clearly much more complicated than that.
 
I think the second spike is due in 2-3 weeks, with the lock down we've just had reinforced, let alone winter, but I'll happily, happily be back here and front up to being wrong if I'm wrong. To your later point, if we are back to herd immunity then I'd like the UK Government to be honest with us about it. I trust the WHO and all the other people who say that aiming for this, with this strain of coronavirus, is tantamount to letting half a million people die, which from a purely economic viewpoint would make the depression we are about to have look like a socially distanced walk in the park.

I'm not like a lot of people here, I'd love football back, I'll be watching the German football this weekend, and I'd happily take Liverpool, who are fair winners, winning the league if we got a punt at Europe and the cup (and more importantly, I'd take Liverpool winning this league and the next 100 if it meant no more deaths and being able to go out and have some beers with my mates over the summer). Just from everything I've read, I don't think we are there yet, and decisions that are being made now will make this more difficult in the future. And I think because of mistakes we made early on, I don't think we will be there till at least August. And for all of the talk of re-starting this season then, taking a hit on lost revenues for 10 games is much more preferable than taking the hit on a whole new season.

But I'm no expert, I hope I'm wrong, but that's where I'm at. But regardless, I just find the framing of economy vs health dangerous, because it's clearly much more complicated than that.
BB, the situation is it’s always been about herd immunity, whether that’s acquired by getting the infection, or via vaccination (some way off). Around 70% population immunity required before no longer a public health issue, we will get an idea once screening modalities improve of population immunity levels and I don’t mean swabs because a negative swan generally means shit. There is medical evidence coming suggesting many have had it without knowing.
Corona is a new virus and highly contagious, and just like flu goes for the elderly and sick in the main.
So the answer by all governments with the lockdown is to ease and squeeze the lockdown to manage the situation so that healthcare is not overwhelmed. Unfortunately and it’s nobody’s fault, people are sadly going to die, just as they do the flu (500,000 worldwide deaths from flu annually).
Governments around the world are in an unenviable position of trying to navigate through a rock and a hard place, to try and save lives but also ensure we can afford to live, get healthcare, bins emptied, keep your job, pay for your city season card.
Hopefully vaccine soon or strong evidence that most have had it without knowing.
Re-football getting back, I can’t say I’ve missed it as the constant negativity was ruining my enjoyment.
Any way keep safe and hopefully we’ll all come out the other side of this
 
I think the second spike is due in 2-3 weeks, with the lock down we've just had reinforced, let alone winter, but I'll happily, happily be back here and front up to being wrong if I'm wrong. To your later point, if we are back to herd immunity then I'd like the UK Government to be honest with us about it. I trust the WHO and all the other people who say that aiming for this, with this strain of coronavirus, is tantamount to letting half a million people die, which from a purely economic viewpoint would make the depression we are about to have look like a socially distanced walk in the park.

I'm not like a lot of people here, I'd love football back, I'll be watching the German football this weekend, and I'd happily take Liverpool, who are fair winners, winning the league if we got a punt at Europe and the cup (and more importantly, I'd take Liverpool winning this league and the next 100 if it meant no more deaths and being able to go out and have some beers with my mates over the summer). Just from everything I've read, I don't think we are there yet, and decisions that are being made now will make this more difficult in the future. And I think because of mistakes we made early on, I don't think we will be there till at least August. And for all of the talk of re-starting this season then, taking a hit on lost revenues for 10 games is much more preferable than taking the hit on a whole new season.

But I'm no expert, I hope I'm wrong, but that's where I'm at. But regardless, I just find the framing of economy vs health dangerous, because it's clearly much more complicated than that.
I believe herd immunity is not possible based on the size of the infected population but I do think it could still be a much bigger factor in UK policy. If you look across the globe, there does seem to be a regional trend based around latitude. This fits the seasonal and periodic nature of previous epidemics. I think part of policy may reflect a desire to avoid a Winter Round 2, and hence policy is driven by science, or maybe it coincides with industry. I get the feeling that people like Laura Kuenssberg are always looking for a chink between SAGE and the government, and think there might be a tension between public health and the economy but there is an alternative reading in that the UK scientists maybe softer on the virus than people think because they are playing the long game.

I am hopeful at the moment because in most places the virus is receding. It's just taking a painfully long time, and each day rolls into the next without much change.
 

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