How the ‘Big Six’ of the Premier League are preparing for the restart of the project – Ghana Latest Football News, Live Scores, Results



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Apparently we are approaching the resumption of the Premier League in light of the coronavirus pandemic as Project Restart accelerates.

The goal of England’s top flight is to resume on 12 June behind closed doors in neutral locations and with a long list of health and safety measures in place to safeguard the well-being of players.

The Premier League was halted on March 12 after Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta hired Covid-19, meaning it has been two months since there was competitive action.

The closure of the campaign has resulted in players having to maintain their fitness in various ways at home as the British government continues to apply blocking rules.

With all the relevant authorities set for talks next week about the next phase of the Premier League, Sportsmail looks at how the traditional ‘Big Six’ has fared.

ARSENAL

Arsenal were the first Premier League team to retrain when they made their London Colney base accessible to their players once again starting Monday, April 27.

Players have access to training camps on a strict rotation basis, where they exercise in small groups while maintaining adequate social distance within government coronavirus guidelines.

Groups of four out of five players can perform conditioning exercises together as they stretch between the training ground. They are expected to drive to the training camp alone as a team and leave without socializing, eating or showering.

In advance, Arteta, who is now fully recovered, had revealed that he had been assigning individual tasks for each player in his squad.

They were expected to review videos of their performance and discuss the findings with their boss.

“With technology, we know when a player has downloaded the game, when he has done his homework,” he told the club’s official website. You have to tell me everything! Then they cannot escape. And to be fair, they have been really good.

“They have to say what they did wrong or right and why this scenario happened and if they could have prevented it before it actually happened.”

“A lot of times it’s just about communication, but other times it’s about positioning, it’s about body shape, the technique of how they should defend themselves.”

CHELSEA

For Arsenal’s rival in London, Chelsea, the image is different. The Blues have yet to resume training at their Cobham base, and manager Frank Lampard has expressed concern over his fitness at the closing.

The Stamford Bridge outfit was personally affected by the coronavirus when winger Callum Hudson-Odoi hired him. The England international was the first Premier League player to test positive for Covid-19. Like Arteta, she has recovered fortunately.

Chelsea first-team players who have been abroad, such as Kepa Arizzabalaga, Willian and Pedro, were asked to return to London before May 3 as the club prepares for training.

Chelsea’s Cobham Training Complex has been closed since mid-March. However, Stamford Bridge was opened earlier this month for players who live locally to train on the field, but only one-on-one sessions were allowed.

With Cobham out of bounds, Lampard has remotely given his players daily plans where they were expected to train on their hourly allowance to go out.

Lampard said: ‘It was really important, first and foremost, for me and the staff to make sure everyone was mentally well with this sudden change, which means they cannot leave the house.

‘Once we understand that, we try to keep in touch with the players all the time, but we have given them daily plans. They train in the hour they gave us at the closing and you can be outside, we gave them operating plans.

‘They run and then we change plans every week. We don’t make them run every day, sometimes we make them go out a little bit, where they can do some strength work at home.

“The hardest thing for us is when the return is not known: we are so used to preparing for a game next week, so it’s difficult.” How many runs can you give them? Then we change it.

“There are a few weeks where we have rested them a little bit and then we continue to work and keep in touch.”

LIVERPOOL

On Thursday it was announced that Liverpool had partially reopened its training base at Melwood.

Fugitive leaders voluntarily suspended their base after the Premier League was suspended and have since had their players on personalized programs to ensure they maintain their fitness.

In addition to this group, the sessions have been carried out through video conferencing software, such as Zoom.

The Liverpool Echo reports that only a maximum of three players will be allowed to enter Melwood with only accessible training grounds, with no other facilities.

They report that the coaching staff will not be present either, with only the medical team present.

The site will only be open a couple of days a week and so far less than 50 percent of Jurgen Klopp’s squad has decided to make use of this, with the rest wanting to stay home.

CITY OF MANCHESTER

Like the clubs mentioned above, Manchester City has given its stars tailor-made programs to keep fit.

Initially, City had its players ready to return to training on May 4, but that’s not the case as of yet.

To keep the social aspect of the training, while locked up, members of the first team have participated in group calls while exercising. In April, Kyle Walker shared some of the City team workouts together on social media, a session that featured several members of the sports science team.

However, star forward Sergio Agüero has been honest in admitting that the players are ‘scared’ by the possibility of infecting their families after coming into contact with other stars.

“Most of the players are scared because they have family, they have children, they have babies, parents,” he said.

‘When we go back, I imagine we will be very tense, we will be very careful and, the moment someone feels sick, you will think:’ What happened there? ‘ I hope there is a vaccine so this can all end. ‘

UNITED MANCHESTER

Manchester United is still instructing its players to train at home with the unscheduled club to return to their Aon Training Complex for another 10 days.

Red Devils midfielder Andreas Pereira revealed that he and his teammates will not return to their Carrington base until May 18 when they speak to Globo Esporte.

“We had a meeting and they told us that if everything goes well, we will return to training on May 18 in groups of six,” he said. ‘If that goes well, one or two weeks later, we can train as a group.

“There will be six players training initially and there won’t be much contact between us. We will continue to separate and train in different parts of the field. Those precautions must be followed.

“I don’t know who will be in my group yet.”

Speaking on Friday, manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer said the stars who have been abroad should be back before the weekend as they prepare for the project restart.

Meanwhile, the players have been participating in running and yoga sessions in correspondence with the fitness staff.

“We have not been to training camp yet, we have followed the rules and the children have been good, they have continued to train at home in their gardens,” he told The Football Show on Sky Sports.

‘The training camp is closed, I think the doctors are the only ones who have been there.

“But the kids have been good, they’ve gotten up in the morning doing running sessions, yoga sessions and the fitness staff has been very good to them.”

“It is difficult for players to stay focused and ready all the time because mentally they have to be ready.” That sharpness you need to get from games and training and that’s a long way off, I think. ”

TOTTENHAM

A day after Arsenal announced they were opening their training facilities, Tottenham did the same on April 28.

In a statement, the Spurs announced that they were making a limited number of their pitches available for use by their first-team squad in individual running sessions.

Only one player would be allowed on a field at any time, as the club sought to adhere to the government’s social distancing guidelines.

To ensure the safety of others, each player was told to travel independently and arrive at facilities already dressed in training clothes before returning home immediately after their session ended.

The opening of the facility will have been a relief to the Spurs’ hierarchy after the club got into trouble.

Spurs manager José Mourinho was forced to apologize for violating the closing rules in April when he was seen taking an individual training session with midfielder Tanguy Ndombele.

The couple was photographed by members of the public at Hadley Common, in Barnet, with the Portuguese chief in full Tottenham outfit.

Two members of the public also joined the session, after which Mourinho admitted: ‘I accept that my actions were not in line with government protocol and we should only have contact with members of our own home.

“It is vital that we all play our part and follow government advice to support our heroes on the NHS and save lives.”

Mourinho and Ndombele were not the only pair caught breaking government instructions, with defensive pair Davinson Sánchez and Ryan Sessegnon seen jogging side by side in the same area.

Serge Aurier has also been filmed on Instagram alongside Moussa Sissoko and a friend on different occasions.

Source: m.allfootballapp.com



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