Esta semana La Liga regresó a los entrenamientos y planea jugar en junio

Con la llegada de mayo, y la lenta reactivación de actividades en España, esta semana La Liga regresó a los entrenamientos en equipo, bajo el consentimiento del Ministerio de Sanidad español. Los entrenamientos se realizan siguiendo un protocolo de …

Con la llegada de mayo, y la lenta reactivación de actividades en España, esta semana La Liga regresó a los entrenamientos en equipo, bajo el consentimiento del Ministerio de Sanidad español.

Los entrenamientos se realizan siguiendo un protocolo de salud para salvaguardar el bienestar de todos los involucrados. El panorama, según Javier Tebas, presidente de La Liga, se presta para estipular que los juegos se reinicien en junio.

“La salud es primordial, por eso tenemos un protocolo integral para salvaguardar la salud de todos los involucrados mientras trabajamos en reiniciar LaLiga. Las circunstancias no tienen precedentes, pero esperamos comenzar a jugar nuevamente en junio y terminar nuestra temporada 19/20 este verano. ¡Volver es ganar!”, compartió Tebas en un comunicado.

El reinicio de los entrenamientos estará monitoreado por médicos especialistas para dar seguimiento en todo momento a cualquier amenaza de brote de COVID-19.

Podríamos estar a un mes del regreso del futbol.

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Oficial: México ya no recibirá a la NFL en 2020

Malas noticias para los aficionados de la NFL en México. Se ha hecho oficial que el juego de los Arizona Cardinals planeado para llevarse a cabo en el Estadio Azteca de la Ciudad de México ha quedado cancelado como respuesta ante la pandemia de …

Malas noticias para los aficionados de la NFL en México. Se ha hecho oficial que el juego de los Arizona Cardinals planeado para llevarse a cabo en el Estadio Azteca de la Ciudad de México ha quedado cancelado como respuesta ante la pandemia de coronavirus.

“La NFL anunció hoy que llevará a cabo todos sus juegos de la temporada 2020 en Estados Unidos, en donde implementará un mismo protocolo enfocado en el bienestar de los jugadores, personal de la liga y los aficionados. El juego programado para este año en el Estadio Azteca de la Ciudad de México se realizará en la temporada del 2021”, publicó la NFL en un comunicado.

México no será el único país afectado. La NFL tampoco realizará sus juegos planeados en Londres. Sin embargo, la liga afirmó que se volverán a planear juegos en el extranjero en 2021.

“Después de un análisis considerable, creemos que la decisión de jugar todos nuestros partidos dentro del país esta temporada es la correcta para nuestros jugadores, equipos y todos nuestros aficionados en los Estados Unidos, México y el Reino Unido”, declaró el vicepresidente ejecutivo, director de estrategia y oficial de crecimiento de la NFL, Christopher Halpin, a través de un comunicado. “Apreciamos enormemente el apoyo de nuestros socios de gobierno y estadios en México y el Reino Unido, quienes están de acuerdo con esta decisión y esperamos volver para partidos en ambos países en la temporada del 2021”, agrega el comunicado.

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Estadios del mundo que sirven de hospitales por el coronavirus

Foto vía @sergiohv_ La emergencia sanitaria que azota al mundo por el COVID-19 ha provocado la saturación de hospitales para atender pacientes contagiados, es por ello que diversas entidades deportivas han prestado sus instalaciones para la creación …

Foto vía @sergiohv_

La emergencia sanitaria que azota al mundo por el COVID-19 ha provocado la saturación de hospitales para atender pacientes contagiados, es por ello que diversas entidades deportivas han prestado sus instalaciones para la creación de hospitales temporales que permitan al personal médico seguir luchando contra la pandemia.

En Estados Unidos, México y otros países, diversos recintos deportivos han sido acondicionados con equipo médico para atender personas contagiadas y así liberar un poco la sobrepoblación hospitalaria que enfrenta el mundo.

Te presentamos estadios al rededor del mundo que hoy sirven de hospitales para atender a la población.

Maracaná, Brasil

El templo de futbol más sagrado para los brasileños hoy sirve de esperanza para pacientes que luchan contra el COVID-19. El Maracaná ha sido acondicionado con 400 camas como hospital de campaña por parte de la milicia brasileña.

Bob Arum suggests UFC’s Dana White is behaving recklessly

Promoter Bob Arum said he’ll follow the lead of major sports leagues, not Dana White, in determining when to resume boxing.

Boxing promoter Bob Arum said his sport should follow the lead of the major sports leagues, not UFC President Dana White.

White is planning to stage three UFC events in the coming weeks – May 9 (UFC 249), May 13 and 16 – without live audiences at VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonville, Florida. They will be the first UFC events since the coronavirus took hold.

White had originally scheduled UFC 249 for April 18 on Tribal land in central California but bowed to political pressure and postponed the event.

Arum suggested that White is still acting recklessly. The Top Rank CEO has discussed staging events with no spectators in late June at the earliest.

“Good luck to them,” Arum told BoxingScene.com. “I just hope that they’re not endangering the safety of anyone. But this kind of cowboy behavior doesn’t do anybody any good.”

He went on: “We’re looking now with Nevada, which we’ll do in a sensible way, or California. We’re working with [Nevada’s] Bob Bennett and [California’s] Andy Foster, and we’re talking to the Texas commission. We’re only gonna do this if it’s safe for the fighters and everyone involved, and if it’s approved by the medical authorities.

“We’re not gonna be cowboys, like Dana White. I don’t wanna get politics involved, but I have really very little respect for Dana and what he’s doing.”

Arum will look for cues from the NBA and NFL.

“I think the behavior of people in sports we should be following,” Arum said, “are Adam Silver of the NBA, Roger Goodell of the NFL, people who are proceeding cautiously and safely, not people who are acting like cowboys.

“For example, [the UFC] wanted to do this fight in California and they were prevented by the governor [Gavin Newsom] and by senator [Dianne] Feinstein going to ESPN and having Dana pull [the plug].

“It turned out one of the fighters, in fact, tested positive afterwards for coronavirus. You know, if we get something like that on one of Dana’s shows, and God forbid there’s a serious incident of spreading the disease, it doesn’t do well for anybody who’s involved with sports.”

Lyman Good was on the UFC 249 card when it was scheduled to take place in Brooklyn but he pulled out and later announced he had tested positive for the coronavirus.

Tener juegos en Disney World podría ser la única forma de salvar la NBA

Han pasado 50 días desde que la NBA suspendió su temporada tras el positivo de Rudy Gobert en COVID-19, la enfermedad causada por el nuevo coronavirus. Un regreso de la temporada de la NBA, o de cualquier deporte estadounidense, parece estar en el …

Han pasado 50 días desde que la NBA suspendió su temporada tras el positivo de Rudy Gobert en COVID-19, la enfermedad causada por el nuevo coronavirus. Un regreso de la temporada de la NBA, o de cualquier deporte estadounidense, parece estar en el futuro distante, si acaso.

A lo largo de las últimas semanas, las ligas han presentado ideas sobre reiniciar sus temporadas en aislamiento y bajo estricta vigilancia. La MLB, por ejemplo, inicialmente quería llevar a cabo todos sus juegos en Phoenix, con los jugadores únicamente moviéndose entre hotel y estadio… lejos de sus familias.

Esa idea fue rechazada por varios jugadores de la MLB que no quieren vivir aislados durante meses. La NBA consideró un plan similar en Las Vegas. Pero el miércoles, Shams Charania de The Athletic reportó que la NBA ahora está considerando un plan para reiniciar su temporada en Walt Disney World Resort en Orlando.

Obviamente, para que cualquier plan funcione, Estados Unidos tendría que incrementar su capacidad de hacer pruebas DRÁSTICAMENTE a tal punto que la demanda de miles de pruebas para las ligas deportivas no pusiera en riesgo la salud pública. Aún estamos lejos de ese punto. También requeriría que los fans dejen de creer en el dealing corporativo involucrado en este plan, cada juego sería un recordatorio de los esfuerzos de PR de ESPN por empujar el lanzamiento de Disney+.

Pero si la NBA fuera adelante con este plan “biodomo”, Disney World haría mucho más sentido que Las Vegas.

En primera, Disney World es una instalación privada de 40 millas cuadradas con hoteles vacíos y un montón de infraestructura deportiva. Alberga el complejo de ESPN Wide World of Sports, el cual incluye una arena, el HP Fieldhouse (con cuatro canchas completas) y el Visa Athletic Center (que también puede tener canchas de basquet).

Mientras que un jugador de la NBA no podría salir en Las Vegas sin el riesgo de infectarse, Disney World podría controlar la entrada en la propiedad completa y limitar el acceso a individuos aprobados y “testeados”.

Keith Smith de Yahoo Sportys, y ex empleado de Disney, hizo un punto similar hace algunas semanas:

A diferencia de otras ubicaciones mencionadas como candidatos para ubicaciones únicas, Walt Disney World  es una propiedad privada. Eso incluye no solo los hoteles y los EWWS, sino también los alrededores inmediatos. Disney puede crear una burbuja al cerrar las calles y negar el acceso a cualquier área con relativa facilidad. Algunas de las otras ubicaciones potenciales podrías restringir el acceso a hoteles/casas y las instalaciones de basquetbol, pero cerrar los alrededores de áreas públicas sería difícil.

Esto, en teoría, permitiría a los jugadores, staff del equipo y sus familias, vivir en la propiedad de Disney mientras que la liga termina su temporada. Algo que Las Vegas y Phoenix (para la MLB) no podría ofrecer de manera responsable.

Y claro, resulta extraño que una liga encierre una población completa de jugadores, staff, familias, trabajadores del resort, staff de la televisora y seguridad en Disney World durante una pandemia global. Y ya en serio, tiene que haber más realización de pruebas para el público.

Pero Disney World podría ser la única manera de que el basquetbol reinicie en 2020.

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¿Cruz Azul predijo el coronavirus en 2016?

Foto vía @karrrrrime En redes sociales ha surgido una imagen que a más de uno ha dejado sorprendido. Se trata de un balón a escala diseñado por el Cruz Azul para la exposición ‘Balón CDMX’ que fue presentada en 2016 en la Ciudad de México en una de …

Foto vía @karrrrrime

En redes sociales ha surgido una imagen que a más de uno ha dejado sorprendido. Se trata de un balón a escala diseñado por el Cruz Azul para la exposición ‘Balón CDMX’ que fue presentada en 2016 en la Ciudad de México en una de las avenidas principales.

La controversia surge por que el diseño personalizado que eligió el equipo de Cruz Azul es muy similar a la imagen que se ha difundido para identificar al COVID-19, el nuevo coronavirus que ha afectado al mundo.

La coincidencia es demasiada y algunas personas se preguntan si es esta ‘maldición cementera’ la que ha caído sobre el mundo y nos mantiene encerrados y con aislamiento social.

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Three top trainers give their thoughts on impact of lock down

Trainers Robert Garcia, Freddie Roach and Andre Rozier give their thoughts on the impact of the coronavirus lock down.

The trainers understand the impact an extended coronavirus lock down will have had on boxing, both short term and long term, as well as anyone.

DAZN commentator Chris Mannix spoke to three of the best – Robert Garcia, Freddie Roach and Andre Rozier – on the show “From the Corner,” which can be seen on Matchroom Boxing’s YouTube channel.

Here is what the trainers had to say.

ON THE LOCK DOWN

Garcia: “It’s tough, fighters fight for a living and without having any income coming in they have to look for support elsewhere. There are some fortunate fighters like Mikey Garcia and Manny Pacquiao that are getting big paydays, but besides those guys, boxers are going to struggle especially if this goes on for four, five more months, fighters are going to be in trouble.”

Roach: “This has attacked the whole world, we weren’t prepared and it’s hitting us hard, it’s killed all sports. I’ve told my fighters, ‘Don’t get caught off guard, be ready. You have to be in shape at all times,’ because if you get the first call out and you say, ‘I’m not ready yet’, that’s not going to go down well with the promoters.”

Rozier: “Maintain cardio, that’s really important. You are in the house, what do you do? You watch TV and you eat, and some of my guys eat and eat and eat. So, I am telling them to make sure they keep then roadwork going, do as much as you can. You’ve been taught everything in the gym already. Do your exercise, shadow box, just work, that’s all you can do right now. You have to be prepared because when we get back to a new normal, you have to be ready because the first guys that are ready to go will be the first guys to really go.”

ON THE IMPORTANCE OF SPARRING

Garcia: “I’ve thought about it, and we cannot stop sparring. The guys need it. Like Freddie, I remember the days when I would spar every day, I think three days a week is enough now to get the rounds in. We don’t have to bring outside guys in really with the guys we have in there, but sometimes I’ll call the Wild Card [Boxing Club] and ask if there’s someone for one of my guys, and sometimes I’ll get the call from the Wild Card to send a guy over there. We won’t really have a problem as all the guys are living, eating and training together, so it’s not going to affect us too much. Jose Ramirez always wants to spar Vergil Ortiz, because he gets the best work from him.”

Rozier: “Sparring is the essence of practice. I’m not saying your guys have to kill each other in sparring, but you have to formulate your attack plans, your footwork, your ring generalship and that’s how you gain your experience, by sparring. So, it’s going to be really difficult. The only good thing going on with my crew of guys is that they are so diverse that they can spar with each other. I don’t have to call guys in from outside.”

Roach: “Mike Tyson said to me one day, ‘Why do I have to spar with three different sparring partners? Can’t we make it fair and have me spar with one guy for the whole day?’ I said, ‘Well Mike you know that’s not how it works,’ but he tried to convince me! Mike was a character! He KO’d a lot of guys in sparring early in his career, but he wasn’t bad on them later in his career when he was with me. He said to me once, ‘Freddie, you don’t have to get up in the morning and do road work with me, I will do it myself anyway.’ And I said, ‘Yeah, I am just here to spy on you a little bit and make sure you get up!’”

ON BOXING BEHIND CLOSED DOORS 

Garcia: “It’s going to have to happen, like it or not. Boxing is going to change. Jose Ramirez, for example, told me that he’d rather not fight [without fans] but with things going the way they are going, he’s going to have to. There’s nothing else he can do. He doesn’t like the idea, but what else are you going to do? Fighters that have already accomplished so much might be able to retire, or those that haven’t been in the sport for long and aren’t making money could consider doing something else if they don’t like fighting without fans. But those that are in the position where the purses are already huge or they are in world title fights, they are going to have to fight, there’s no way they will make that sort of money.

“Having millions of people watching on TV is just not the same as have the live crowd cheering your name or against you, which can motivate you. It’s something boxing needs, but we’re going to have to deal with it and teach our fighters how to handle it. The gyms are going to change too. Sparring sessions sometimes have lots of people in the gym, but maybe that will be just the trainers and the fighters so that they can get used to this.”

Roach: “Gabriel Rosado had a fight in an empty arena in Phoenix, and it was really hard to motivate him. We had to push him to fight after the [Daniel] Jacobs-[Julio Cesar] Chavez Jr. fight had emptied the arena. It was unusual, but at least he’s had practice at it. It was difficult for him to get his combinations going and get pumped up. There was no crowd, just some officials, judges and the cornermen, that’s it. And we’ll have to get used to that for some time because that’s the path we’re on right now.”

Rozier: “Sergey Derevyanchenko and I spoke about it. I asked him about there being no fans, and he’s such a nonchalant guy, he just said, ‘It’s OK coach, I do what I have to do.’ Fighters are going to have to make it work. You can’t say no, you have to fight. You can’t tell a promoter, ‘Oh, I don’t have an audience so I can’t fight.’ I’m praying we’ll be back eventually, but to get the ball bouncing, we’re going to have to get in the ring in arenas by ourselves. And Robert and Freddie and I will be the guys cheering the fighters on from our corners! The guys that are always in swing-bouts will be ready for this big time!”

Fox Sports, PBC personalities thank coronavirus warriors

Fox Sports and Premier Boxing Champions put together a video featuring their biggest personalities to thank the coronavirus warriors.

Our health care workers and first responders have emerged as heroes in the ongoing fight against the coronavirus.

And that fact isn’t lost on those in the boxing world.

Fox Sports and Premier Boxing Champions took the time to put together a video (see below) featuring many of their biggest stars and personalities to thank those risking their lives.

Here are those who took part:

PBC Fighters

Manny Pacquiao, Errol Spence, Deontay Wilder, Leo Santa Cruz, Andy Ruiz Jr, Shawn Porter, Mikey Garcia, Danny Garcia, Keith Thurman, David Benavidez, Caleb Plant, Abner Mares, Erislandy Lara, Julian Williams, Tony Harrison, Anthony Dirrell, Andre Dirrell, Chris Eubank Jr, Andre Berto and Adam Kownacki.

PBC on FOX Personalities

Brian Kenny, Chris Myers, Joe Goossen, Kate Abdo, Jimmy Lennon Jr, Marcos Villegas, Heidi Androl, Jordan Plant, Steve Cunningham and Ray Flores.

WBC, Voluntary Anti-Doping Association to resume random drug testing

WBC President Mauricio Sulaiman said that his organization, in conjunction with VADA, will soon resume random drug testing.

Cheaters beware.

WBC President Mauricio Sulaiman told ESPN Deportes that his organization, in conjunction with the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association, will soon resume random drug testing as part of its Clean Boxing Program.

The WBC suspended testing on March 21 to protect those involved in the process during the coronavirus pandemic.

“We are in communication with VADA, they are already organizing the corresponding protocols to start the tests for the Clean Boxing Program, we have made a lot of progress in the administrative work and very soon the surprise tests will start randomly,” Sulaiman said.

He went on: “We are ready. It is a matter of the laboratory confirming the areas where the tests can be carried out. It was suspended for care, health, and in order not to put laboratory collectors or boxers and their families at risk.

“It was illogical to think that during a pandemic, when everyone is forced to be at home, in many countries by law, a project that disobeys such liaisons will be considered or forced.”

Classic fight replays — led by Ali-Frazier trilogy — do strong ratings on ESPN

ESPN’s replay of the “Thrilla in Manila” was the sixth-most-watched sports-related show of the past week.

Fans are watching boxing even when there’s no boxing.

ESPN’s replay of the third fight between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier in 1975 – The “Thrilla in Manila” – was the sixth-most-watched sports-related show of the past week, according to ShowBuzzDaily. An average of 699,000 people watched the fight, Forbes reported.

As Forbes pointed out, that figure is higher than the 683,000 who viewed the Wednesday episode of the new professional wrestling outfit AEW Dynamite.

Classic boxing shows made up eight of the 20 most-watched sports programs this past week. That also included Ali-Frazier I, Mike Tyson-Michael Spinks and Oscar De La Hoya-Julio Cesar Chavez.

An ESPN boxing analyst Tweeted: “Amazing numbers on ESPN Linear. … Boxing Library works amazing! Perhaps better than any other Sport.”

ESPN devoted 11 hours to boxing on Saturday, including the first time the first Ali-Frazier has been televised since 1991. That fight had an average audience of 641,000. The second Ali-Frazier fight averaged 607,000.

The only live card on ESPN this year — headlined by Eleider Alvarez vs. Michael Seals — averaged 704.000 viewers.

Live sports have been sidelined as a result of the corona virus pandemic.