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Manitoba

Blue Bombers banking pandemic fades in time to allow fans in stands this spring

The Winnipeg Football Club is banking onthe COVID-19pandemic improving enough this springto allow the team to play in front of thousands of fans in fewer than five months.

Home opener vs. Hamilton slated for June 10; current maximum gathering in Manitoba is 5 people

Winnipeg Blue Bomber Adam Bighill celebrates winning the 107th Grey Cup against the Hamilton Tiger Cats in Calgary in 2019. The two teams are slated to meet again with fans in the stands at Investors Group Field on June 10. (Leah Hennel/CBC)

The Winnipeg Football Club is banking onthe COVID-19pandemic improving enough this springto allow the team to play in front of thousands of fans in fewer than five months.

The Winnipeg Blue Bombers are slated to open the 2021 Canadian Football League season at home against the Hamilton Tiger-Cats on June 10.

That is 140 days away.

Football club president and CEO Wade Miller said he's confident Manitobawill allow outdoor gatherings toincrease over that timeframefrom the current maximum of five people to thousands of fans in the stands atInvestors Group Field.

"In November, before vaccinations, before drugs were approved, we were very hopeful that we would be able to have fans back. Now you're seeing vaccinations roll out and and there's still a lot of time," Miller said Wednesday in an interview.

CFL slated to return after pandemic hiatus

The COVID-19 pandemic forced the CFL, which relies more on ticket revenuethan do other professional sports leagues, to cancel its 2020 season. This year's season was announced in November, which turned out to be the worst month of the pandemic inManitoba.

Code red restrictions imposed on the province in November are only slated to be relaxed now, more than two months later, starting with the tentative return of retail sales,hair salons and small household gatherings on Saturday.

Miller said he is optimistic restrictions will recede more rapidly over the coming months, especially with vaccinations underway.

The pace of immunizations has been slow in Manitoba, which plans to vaccinate 70 per cent of the adult population before the start of 2022.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, meanwhile, has repeatedly promised every Canadian who wants a shot will get one by the fall.

"I'm going to listen to our prime minister that people could be vaccinated by September and everybody could get a shot that wants one," Miller said.

"So I'm going to be very positive that we're going to be able to get back on the field with our fans in the stands, like our schedule is right now."

Large gatherings likely last to resume

The Bombers last played in Winnipeg during the regular season in 2019, weeks before their Grey Cup victory in Calgary.

Public health officials, including Manitoba's chief provincial public health officer, have repeatedly warned that gatherings the size of sporting eventswill likely be last aspect of pre-pandemic life to resume.

The Winnipeg Jets, for example, are not expecting any fans in the stands at Bell MTS Place at any point during the 2021 season, which started last week.

Investors Group Field has not hosted a football game since 2019. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

Spectator sports do not just pose a transmission risk. They complicate contact-tracing efforts.

Football games, for example, draw fans from all over the province and sometimes beyond, University of Manitoba community health sciences professor Dan Chateau pointed out last year.

"You don't want those people to go back to their communities and eventually spread COVID-19again through each of their individual spheres of social contact," Chateau said in an interview in April, when the pandemic was one month old.

Miller said it's too early to entertain the possibility public health authorities won't allow fans in the stands at Investors Group Field in June.

"It's January. You know we still have a lot of months ahead of us," he said. "Right now, we have to focus on stomping down the virus."

Pandemic-proofing planned for stadium

Miller said the football club is planning to make Investors Group Field more safe from a public-health standpoint. The Bombers are alsopreparing for the prospect of public health allowing the stadium to open at a reduced capacity.

"We're contingency planning all the time and looking at every scenario and how we physically distance in the stadium," Miller said, adding the club is looking at reducing touch points and finding ways to keep fans apart as they enter and exit Investors Group Field.

Dr. Jillian Horton, a hospital-based Winnipeg internist who was among hundreds of doctors who advocated for tougher pandemic restrictions in the fall, said she can't envision stadium-sized gatherings in the near future.

"I struggle to imagine ascenario where hundreds or thousands of people in the stands is either possible or desirable," Hortonsaid in an interview.

"I relate to the deepdesire people have to see these normal landmarks and milestones come back into our lives," she added. "I don't know how much more disappointment we want to set ourselves up for here.

"A much slower, smaller, incremental rise in expectations may be a better idea."