Prime News Ghana

Juventus take on AC Milan as Italian football returns

By Vincent Ashitey
A Cristiano Ronaldo 91st-minute penalty earned Juve a 1-1 draw at the San Siro in the first leg
A Cristiano Ronaldo 91st-minute penalty earned Juve a 1-1 draw at the San Siro in the first leg
Shares
facebook sharing button Share
twitter sharing button Tweet
email sharing button Email
sharethis sharing button Share

Juventus and AC Milan will be the first two sides back in action following the suspension of Italian football when they face each other in Friday's second leg of their Coppa Italia semi-final.

Football in Italy was halted on 9 March because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Cristiano Ronaldo's controversial late penalty for Juve meant the first leg ended 1-1 on 13 February.

The final of the competition is set for 17 June, three days before the resumption of Serie A.

READ ALSO: VIDEO: Ocampos shines as Sevilla win derby in La Liga return

Napoli lead Inter Milan 1-0 in the other semi-final, which will be played to a conclusion on Saturday.

All games will be played behind closed doors, although the head of Italy's football federation (FIGC) Gabriele Gravina has said he hopes that some fans can be allowed back into stadiums to watch matches before the end of the current season.

This week it was decided that extra-time would be scrapped for the cup ties, which will go straight to a penalty shootout if they remain level on aggregate after the second leg.

Suspension and resumption

As one of the European countries initially worst hit by coronavirus, Italy were one of the first to enact measures in football to try and combat the disease's spread.

Six Serie A matches were played behind closed doors, including SPAL's 1-0 victory at Parma, which kicked off 75 minutes late after Italy's sports minister requested the league be suspended.

This was enacted on 9 March with 12 rounds of matches (along with four outstanding games) remaining and Juventus leading the top-flight table, a point ahead of Lazio.

The Coppa Italia semi-finals second leg between Juve and Milan was originally scheduled for 4 March but was postponed by the Turin city government at 24 hours' notice.

On 20 May the FIGC set a 20 August deadline for finishing the 2019-20 season, with the current plan being to play the final round of Serie A games on 2 August.

Players returned to individual training earlier this month before group sessions restarted this week.

The current schedule dictates that Serie A teams will play twice a week with matches almost every day when the season resumes.

READ ALSO: Serie A: Training has been very difficult - Agyemang Babu

There are just 10 days between 20 June and the season ending on 2 August that will not feature a game.

The Italian top-flight will be the fourth of Europe's top five major leagues to resume amid the continued threat of coronavirus, as the Bundesliga became the first to restart on May 18.

Spain's La Liga is due to reopen its doors on June 11, while the Premier League is expected to recommence in England six days later.

Source: bbc