Coronavirus and football (soccer): Why mid-day matches are much safer for players

Safely resuming sporting events while the coronavirus is spreading is challenging - yet possible - if the science is taken into account. Two main ways the coronavirus can spread among football players is through air-suspended microdroplets (and possibly aerosols), and via contact with contaminated surfaces. Here we estimated virus survival in dried saliva droplets on a football pitch (i.e., on the grass) and on the ball itself, and compared these measures between mid-day and nighttime matches. We find, based on experiments with the enveloped phage Phi6 - a surrogate for SARS-Cov-2 - that while the virus survives reasonably well on both pitch and ball during a nighttime match (~10% survival), virtually no viruses survived the 90-minute duration of a mid-day match on a hot, sunny day. These results, taken together with studies reporting rapid deactivation of coronavirus in aerosols by sunlight, suggest that playing football in mid-day reduces the likelihood of transmission between players, and thus increases players` safety.
© Copyright 2020 Preprints. MDPI. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:biological and medical sciences organisations and events sport games
Tagging:Coronavirus
Published in:Preprints
Language:English
Published: 2020
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202007.0012.v1
Issue:preprint
Pages:2020070012
Document types:article
Level:advanced