Coronavirus: 'Patience wearing thin' with football after continued breaches of rules and protocols
- Published

Fans lined the streets to welcome the players for Sunday's FA Cup match between Marine and Spurs
Images of players celebrating inside tightly packed dressing rooms were an unwelcome feature of FA Cup third-round weekend - while crowds of fans gathering outside cup ties drew criticism and caught the attention of government ministers.
On the back of players from all levels of the game apologising for various coronavirus rule breaches, the case for football to continue while the rest of society is locked down is coming under increasing scrutiny.
"Morally, with the situation we have in this country and worldwide, to keep doing what we are doing is a little bit of a strange feeling," Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta said on Monday. "We know what we can bring to society if we are able to do it in safe way."
In the Premier League, referees will speak to captains and managers before matches to remind them to observe social distancing guidelines, including around situations like goal celebrations and handshakes.
New EFL chief executive Trevor Birch wrote to all clubs on Monday, warning them "now is not the time for complacency" over Covid protocols, adding: "We will come under extreme governmental pressure if we continue to flout the rules and guidance in place.
"It is more important than ever that all club staff and players vigilantly follow the processes to avoid a suspension and the implications, particularly financial, associated with such a drastic course of action."
BBC sports editor Dan Roan says while elite sport is not yet in the "last-chance saloon", there are "no guarantees" with "patience wearing thin".
What is the background?
Over the weekend, the UK ed the milestone of 80,000 coronavirus-related deaths since the start of the pandemic and there is debate about whether England's lockdown restrictions should be tightened even further.
But some elite sport has been able to continue under strict protocols established in the summer.
With several shock results in this weekend's FA Cup, players were keen to celebrate, but videos from the dressing rooms with players not socially distancing has led to criticism on social media.
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There were also images of fans gathered outside Marine's stadium in Crosby, Merseyside, before their match against Tottenham on Sunday.
Merseyside Police said the "vast majority of people present were adhering to social-distancing measures and those who were not were advised by officers".
More than 60 games in England have been called off this season, with Aston Villa's match against Tottenham on Wednesday the fifth Premier League postponement.
Players from Spurs, Fulham, Crystal Palace, West Ham and Manchester City were recently criticised by their clubs for breaking England's restrictions over the new year holiday.
In the Women's Super League, Arsenal's trip to Aston Villa and Manchester City's home game with West Ham were both postponed after five players tested positive for coronavirus following trips to Dubai over Christmas.
Manchester United boss Casey Stoney apologised for giving her players permission to travel to Dubai over the festive period.
What are the rules?
In short, be sensible and minimise .
After a relative surge in cases - 40 players and club staff tested positive in the first week in January - the Premier League introduced stronger protocols:
Players and managers were reminded to avoid unnecessary , with compliance officers told to check behaviour in dressing rooms.
Officers would also check hotel stays and travel plans, with staff numbers at training grounds reduced to enforce social distancing guidelines.
Stricter matchday protocols include avoiding unnecessary at all times, and substitutes wearing face masks.
The Premier League previously tested players once a week but increased it to two rounds over the past week.
Players and staff at English Football League clubs will now be given coronavirus tests twice a week to help find asymptomatic cases earlier. There were 112 positive cases at the 66 EFL clubs in its most recent round of testing.
What has been the reaction?
The Football Association will be reminding everyone of their responsibilities.
It is understood there are no plans to halt elite sport but government ministers are concerned that the images from dressing rooms could make it harder to defend its continuation.
A Whitehall source confirmed to the BBC that the celebrations at Chorley and Crawley Town had been noted by ministers, who last week warned football's authorities they had to do all they could to justify elite sport carrying on.
In his letter written to clubs on Monday, seen by BBC Sport, EFL chief executive Birch also said: "Throughout the pandemic, football has provided a glimmer of hope for many millions of people affected by restrictions but we all understand the scrutiny the game remains under.
"While football is permitted to continue the actions of all participants will clearly be under the microscope.
"I am therefore personally asking you to re-double your efforts, to check, amend and tighten your protocol accordingly, and ensure that players and staff are left in no doubt as to their responsibilities on matchdays."
Professor Chris Whitty, the chief medical officer for England, told BBC Breakfast that allowing team sports to continue was "a balancing act".
"The balancing act is trying to minimise the amount of outside very structured environments while trying to keep some semblance of life as will all know it," he said.
"It is very much a matter for individuals in their day-to-day life. We have all got to say what, in our own lives, can we do to minimise the amount of impact we have on the NHS and the vulnerable">