Published 07:04 IST, April 17th 2020

Bayern Munich star Suele wary of Bundesliga returning too soon

Germany and Bayern Munich defender Niklas Suele admits having mixed feelings about the possible return of German league football next month amid coronavirus

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Germany and Bayern Munich defender Niklas Suele admits having mixed feelings about possible return of German league football next month amid coronavirus pandemic. Next Thursday, German Football League (DFL) plans to meet via video conference with 36 clubs in first two leagues to discuss wher matches can resume in early May. As public events in Germany are banned until August 31, football matches before that date could only be played in near-empty stadiums with fans locked out.

Suele wary of Bundesliga returning too soon

If German authorities give green light, Bundesliga could be first top European league to resume since German league matches were halted on March 13. Most of 18 top flight clubs in Germany returned to training last week, albeit with social distancing being observed even on pitch. DFL is determined to finish season by June 30 to ensure its clubs do t lose out on crucial TV rights revenue, but Suele is sceptical.

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"re are many more important things than football at moment," 24-year-old told AFP subsidiary SID.

"Of course I want to get fit and play again, but important thing is that my family is well, that everyone is healthy.

"As football professionals, we are blessed when we see how many companies have to close or how hard some families are hit. That's bad.

"Wher we play sooner or later is irrelevant." 

However, Suele admits he would be "very happy if we could start again. Maybe it would also be a little distraction for many fans". Suele has returned to training after a serious knee injury last October, and ackwledges that his comeback will probably be in front of empty terraces. "Of course, during rehab I imagined how nice it would be to run out at sold-out Allianz Arena (Bayern's home ground) again," he said. "Unfortunately, that's going to be a thing of past, but I'd still be happy to be able to play with my team again." 

In Germany, games played behind locked doors are called "ghost games" and Suele insists y are a better option than matches at all. "From my point of view, re's player anyway who'd rar t play at all than have ghost games," he added. Just over 3,500 people have so far died due to coronavirus in Germany. 

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Im credits: AP

07:04 IST, April 17th 2020