Coronavirus pandemic: Chinese football team Wuhan Zall, stuck in Spain due to COVID-19 back home, escaping to China
Wuhan Zall was expected to return to China on Saturday, nearly 1 1/2 months after it arrived in Spain for preseason training. The team had not been able to leave because of the coronavirus restrictions in China, but expedited its departure because of the worsening situation in Spain.

Madrid: The Chinese football team that was originally stuck in Spain because of the coronavirus pandemic is going back home to try to avoid its rapid spread in Europe.

Players of the Chinese Super League team Wuhan Zall arrive at the Atocha train station in Madrid on 29 February. AP Photo
Wuhan Zall was expected to return to China on Saturday, nearly 1 1/2 months after it arrived in Spain for preseason training. The team had not been able to leave because of the restrictions in China, but expedited its departure because of the worsening situation in Spain.
The team initially planned to leave Spain mid-February but had extended its stay in the southern region of the country until at least the end of March. That plan changed this week because of the sharp spike in the number of cases in Spain and Europe generally.
Related Articles
“Things are well over there (in China) now,” José González, the team's Spanish coach, told The Associated Press on Saturday. “The Chinese league will likely start at the beginning of May. We will have to enter quarantine when we arrive, so the sooner we leave, the better.”
The team will first go to the city of Shenzhen, where it is expected to finish its preseason training for the Chinese Super League, the country’s main first-division football competition. The league was supposed to start on 22 February but was suspended because of the virus.
The city of Wuhan was the epicenter of the outbreak that rapidly spread to other countries and infected more than 145,000 people worldwide, with 5,400 deaths.
Spain was set to follow Italy on Saturday in declaring a nationwide lockdown as European countries took ever more sweeping measures to reduce contact among people and slow the accelerating spread of the coronavirus. Health authorities in Spain said more than 5,700 people were infected and the number of cases could reach 10,000 in the coming days.
For most people, the new coronavirus causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia. The vast majority of people recover.
The number of new cases have dwindled in China, where more than 65,000 people recovered from the virus. The nation has been easing up on lockdown measures in its hardest-hit region that included the city of Wuhan.
None of the Wuhan Zall players were infected when the team arrived in Spain, but the grandmother of one player was among the coronavirus-linked deaths back home.
Players have been away from home for several months because the team began its preseason in the Chinese city of Guanghzou, nearly 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) away from Wuhan.
Although the team was far away from the initial outbreak, Spanish health authorities had to come out publicly to say there was no reason for local citizens to be concerned about the squad’s arrival in January. Three players arrived from China later and had to stay in quarantine and be tested for the virus before joining the rest of the group.
also read

What’s HMPV, the ‘most important virus you've never heard of’?
Human metapneumovirus, or HMPV, is an illness that affects the upper respiratory system, causing similar COVID-19 symptoms, such as cough, sore throat, and fever. While it can affect people of all ages, the risk is higher for children, older adults, and those with compromised immune systems

Xi Jinping's Covid Conundrum: Surging new wave will kill people, lockdown will kill economy
The health authorities in China have since April reported a resurgence in Covid cases fuelled by the XBB variant

Xi Jinping’s colossal Covid failure: Mega wave hits hard as China’s vaccination claims fall flat
Covid-19 cases in China are expected to peak in June and as many as 65 million people are expected to be infected by the virus