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It is the implementation of the upcoming agreements in the Danish national league group that has been affected by the entry complications that have arisen.
Fear of spreading a mutated version of the coronavirus is behind the decision by British authorities to tighten quarantine requirements for people arriving in the country from Denmark. The mutated virus variant originated from Danish mink farms.
In the future, everyone traveling to the UK and coming from Denmark will be quarantined for ten days. He has created the purest football chaos.
Denmark report: “Very urgent”
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On Wednesday, Sweden and Denmark will meet in the national league, but it will be quick without the Premier League stars of both teams. English elite series clubs refuse to allow their Danish and Swedish players to travel to Denmark, all the while resulting in a mandatory ten-day quarantine upon return.
So far there is no indication that an exception is granted.
Next Saturday, Iceland will face Denmark on Danish soil. And three days later, the Icelanders will play an away game against England. There will also be problems.
The English authorities, as is the case now, will not release Icelandic players coming to the country from Denmark without a ten-day quarantine. Therefore, Iceland runs the risk of having to deploy two different troops for the matches against Denmark and England.
– We see it this way, that there are more important things in the world than football, and we just have to adapt to development, says General Secretary Klara Bjartmarz of the Icelandic Football Association to the Danish newspaper Politiken.
He currently has no idea what will happen to the England game next week.
Flattery renounced
Denmark’s new national team coach Kasper Hjulmand believes England may be the big loser in the chaos that now reigns. He claims that the European Football Association (Uefa) is putting pressure on the British authorities.
– There is enormous pressure on the English government, because this is also about the English team, which I understand can be condemned to lose in the Iceland game, he says.
Danish goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel is not happy that the decision of the British authorities affects international matches.
– The government has made a decision now. I hope they make sense and see that we are very protected and in a bubble. They test us all the time. I hope to be able to participate in at least one, if not two, of the matches, says the Leicester goalkeeper.
The new austerity measures in the UK went into effect on Saturday and will be reconsidered after a week.
Denmark’s third international match in the next period is away against Belgium, which is currently unaffected by the new rules.