Coventry Telegraph

Players chip in for NHS as Saints defer salaries

- By SIMON PEACH sport@coventryte­legraph.net

PREMIER League footballer­s have drawn praise from the NHS for their contributi­on towards tackling the coronaviru­s pandemic, while Southampto­n players became the first in the top flight to accept a wage deferral.

Saints’ players, along with manager Ralph Hasenhuttl and his coaching staff, have agreed to the deferral for April, May and June, with the club announcing no staff were being furloughed during this period.

On Wednesday night a number of Premier League players posted on social media about the #Playerstog­ether initiative, which will direct funds to the NHS Charities Together group for distributi­on to good causes working to provide support to NHS staff and patients.

NHSCT chief executive Ellie Orton welcomed the move, and said: “Our experience of footballer­s has always been absolutely fantastic – they have always really supported charities.

“They have worked with NHS charities near their clubs, and that is through donations but also with teams going in and visiting young people and lifting morale.

“This is what they have always been like. What they wanted to do here is come together as players and say ‘NHS, we’re rooting for you, we’re behind you,’ and hopefully that can inspire other people to do the same.”

Wolves’ captain Conor Coady praised his Liverpool counterpar­t Jordan Henderson for his role in bringing the initiative to fruition.

“Jordan was brilliant in terms of setting up and taking the initiative and moving forward with it and then getting in contact with everybody,” he said. “As soon as he did, everybody was on board straight away. So it’s a brilliant, brilliant thing that he’s set up and something that’ll affect a lot of people.”

Southampto­n players did their part in helping to tackle the separate issue of how clubs survive the suspension of football activity due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Their deferral was the first to be confirmed since Premier League clubs agreed at a meeting last Friday to consult with players over the matter.

Premier League chief executive Richard Masters wrote to Julian Knight, the chair of the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport committee earlier this week and said clubs stood to lose “at least £1billion” collective­ly if the 2019-20 season could not be completed.

In the EFL, discussion­s are continuing between the Profession­al Footballer­s’ Associatio­n and clubs regarding deferrals and cuts there, as clubs struggle to cope without the anticipate­d matchday revenue.

EFL chairman Rick Parry set out a plan for a summer return to action, but admitted in a letter that the assumption was that matches would be played behind closed doors.

While acknowledg­ing the financial impact of that, he said the league was not yet going to forward on to clubs an advance from the Premier League until the outcome of the wage deferral talks was known: “In respect of the Premier League’s decision to advance £125m of funds, the EFL Board has taken the decision to put on hold the forwarding of advanced monies while additional clarity is sought on other financial matters, particular­ly in respect to player wages.”

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