Sheffield United star Sander Berge makes a big prediction about football post-coronavirus
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With the Premier League agreeing to extend the postponement of matches for an indefinite period, Chris Wilder’s side and their supporters face going three months or more without a game unless the health situation improves.
Although the sports’ governing bodies have acknowledged the nation’s health is their primary concern, The Star has revealed how being denied the opportunity to watch their team in action could leave some supporters feeling even more isolated, as the country enters its third week of lockdown.
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Hide AdBerge, who like the rest of Wilder’s squad is training at home, said: “I think it’ll make everyone appreciate it more, football will be cherished even more and people will appreciate every game and training session.
“There’ll be even more interest and fire in every game, we have to look at it as a positive when we start up, whenever that is.”
Berge, aged 22, had only been in the country two months when Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced a raft of measures designed to try and limit the spread of the disease. Berge and his team mates had initially continued to congregate at the Steelphalt Academy when fixtures were first suspended. But social distancing guidelines eventually made that impossible, with coaching staff now organising sessions via videolink.
Being forced to stay indoors is likely to prove particularly challenging for the likes of Berge, Panos Retsos and Richairo Zivkovic who, after also arriving at Bramall Lane from overseas in January, are now cut-off from their friends, families and loved ones.
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Hide AdBerge, a Norway international, became United’s record signing when he completed a £22m move from Genk.
“If I hadn’t experienced moving before it’d be tough, if it was my first adventure outside Norway,” he said. “But I’ve had 35 months alone in Belgium, so I know how to keep myself busy, enjoying my own company otherwise it’d be difficult. I always keep busy.
"Our days are structured, and we have a lot of work to do."