The Wall Street Journal: Covid is disrupting sports again, this time with teamwide outbreaks

The richest professional sports leagues in the world spent enormous sums of money and took extraordinary measures to play through the pandemic in 2020. They bubbled, tested, and traced their way to make it to 2021, when there was more optimism about a return to something that resembled normalcy. 

But the past week in sports has been a blunt reminder that the virus is still a problem for sports. And the issues in recent days foreshadow more disruptions and stricter measures to thwart rising caseloads. 

NBA stars Giannis Antetokounmpo and James Harden were among the dozens sidelined by the league’s health and safety protocols this week, absences that threaten to spoil the marquee Christmas Day schedule next week, while the league already postponed its first games of the season in response to a teamwide outbreak on the Chicago Bulls.

The English Premier League reintroduced what it called “emergency measures” as giants Manchester United
MANU,
-1.90%

 and Tottenham Hotspur had games postponed and their training facilities shuttered because of outbreaks. The Calgary Flames became the third NHL team to have their season paused because of an outbreak.

An expanded version of this story appears on WSJ.com.

Popular stories from WSJ.com:

Share:

Futurist Eric Fry says it will be a “Summer of Surge” for these three stocks

One company to replace Amazon… another to rival Tesla… and a third to upset Nvidia. These little-known stocks are poised to overtake the three reigning tech darlings in a move that could completely reorder the top dogs of the stock market. Eric Fry gives away names, tickers and full analysis in this first-ever free broadcast.

Watch now…

Latest News

Daily News on Investing, Personal Finance, Markets, and more!

Financial News

Financial News

Policy(Required)

Financial News

Daily News on Investing, Personal Finance, Markets, and more!

Financial News

Policy(Required)