WAYNE ROONEY SAYS he believes the coronavirus pandemic might mean the loss of the 2020-21 season in English football but insisted the Football Association is right to prioritise completing the current season whenever that becomes possible.
The former England captain commended the FA’s decision to extend the length of the current season indefinitely, describing it as “the fair thing” for promotion, relegation and title races to be settled.
Rooney, who plays for Derby County in the Championship, indicated he is opposed to matches being played behind closed doors given the strain emergency services are already under across the UK.
“It wouldn’t surprise me if finishing the season takes until the end of 2020,” Rooney said in The Times.
“Football, like every other industry, is in unknown territory and, just like every other industry, has to listen to the advice and take all necessary precautions. For me, that rules out finishing the season behind closed doors.
“When you play behind closed doors it still means bringing together a fairly large group of people. You need ambulances, doctors, paramedics. They’re mandatory. Police may be needed too. Why bring them all to a football match when in this crisis they will be needed elsewhere for things that are far more important?
“I wouldn’t be comfortable playing a game knowing there were people dying or very sick because of coronavirus and we’re taking those workers away from the front line.”
Despite enjoying two spells at Everton and spending 13 years at Manchester United, Rooney hailed his former clubs’ rivals Liverpool as deserving winners of the Premier League and tipped them to finish the job when the season resumes.