Large financial values ​​are at stake, especially for Allsvenskan, who turn most money into Swedish sports. It is important that the series can get started.

- It's about the same things as in Germany, it's about survival. To be able to play a regular series of home and away meetings, you should get started in June. If you do not get started, large fine clubs can go bankrupt, so there is a desperation and concern, says SVT expert Nannskog in Helgstudion.

Representatives of football-Sweden expressed frustration yesterday after the meeting with the Public Health Agency, FHM, did not give a start date but pushed forward the next message until the beginning of June. Nannskog believes that FHM could be more clear in its directives around football.

"Become a much harder tone"

- It has become a much tougher tone, which I think is about a lack of communication, that you do not get from this football in this dialogue. There I want a much better discussion from the Public Health Authority.

Nannskog believes that it is enough for football to take responsibility for its own activities related to match events.

- When Tegnell says that you are afraid of the consequences in pubs, football can not take responsibility for it. There, the restaurant owners themselves must take responsibility for the rules are followed. Then you get to have a dialogue between the clubs and the fans not to gather outside the stadiums. I believe that the Public Health Agency must continue to trust the citizens and that they are taking care of themselves and not competing with the large public groups that can spread this disease.

"Excessive risks of forging"

FHM believes that the consequences of football matches are too great a risk.

- It is not a matter of the risk precisely to the professional, but the consequences that the professional would have, in the form of crowds, sports bars and other things. It's something like restaurants, some businesses today have to limit their business because it poses such great risks for the spread of infection, said state epidemiologist Anders Tegnell yesterday.

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Håkan Sjöstrand, secretary general of the Swedish Football Association, criticizes the Public Health Authority's "slow handling".