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Scottish FA's Ian Maxwell: 'Football likely to be played in August'

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Football is "likely" to be played in Scotland in August, says Scottish FA chief executive Ian Maxwell.

Non-contact outdoor sports are set to be allowed next week in phase one of the Scottish government's restrictions easing, with football in phase two.

National clinical director Professor Jason Leitch warned there are "no guarantees" that will be in mid-June as predicted but Maxwell said playing in August is "definitely achievable".

"I'm sure we can do that," he said.

"We're seeing it in countries across Europe, whether they're finishing league programmes or starting new ones.

"We have to make sure that we're giving the government comfort and that we can do it in a manner that keeps everyone involved in the game safe."

Speaking to 大象传媒 Scotland, Maxwell also said:

  • There's a "real desire" to meet the "challenge" of maintaining 42 senior clubs

  • It is "right" that the Scottish FA should help fund testing around training and matches

  • Football will be "different" and the sport must be "adaptable and creative"

  • The Scottish game will find out at the end of June if they can get financial help from Fifa

  • It's important that the Scottish FA work out how to get the grassroots game back

'It could be three weeks, it could be six weeks'

Maxwell also echoed the initial suggestion players would need "touching six weeks" to be ready to play.

And, with that in mind, the SPFL is to ask the Scottish government if football clubs can resume training from 10 June.

"We're working through a three-stage plan," Maxwell said. "It will start with a return to training, then it will move on to a return to matches, then obviously on to spectators being allowed back in to stadiums at some point."

It had been estimated that 18 June would be when phase two kicks in and players are allowed to return to training, but that depends on strict criteria being met.

"There are no dates attached to phases two and three," Professor Leitch said. "They may be be three weeks apart if everything goes well, but they might be six weeks apart, or it might be five-and-a-half weeks.

"There is no guarantee when they will happen. It might go backwards a bit or some of the things we said might happen, might not."

However, Professor Leitch told 大象传媒 Scotland's Off the Ball that matches could be played behind closed doors in phase three and that the country's major sports will be able to begin preparing for that.

"We've been in conversation with each of them - in particular rugby and football," he said. "They have five or six-step plans and we would expect that process to begin in phase two.

"That's when you would begin to think about - in phase three - could you have an event behind closed doors or with a small, socially-distant crowd? We'll have to answer those questions as and when we reach those moments."

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