MotoGP legend Rossi positive for COVID-19

Nine-times world champion Valentino Rossi has tested positive for COVID-19 and will miss this weekend’s MotoGP Aragon Grand Prix on another day when the coronvirus pandemic has wrought havoc on world sport.

Italian Rossi, a 41-year-old legend of motorsport, becomes the latest major sporting name to be hit by the virus after a week which has already seen football great Cristiano Ronaldo, the world’s No.1 golfer Dustin Johnson and tennis stars Fabio Fognini and Sam Querrey testing positive.

The news also came on a day when there were more question marks over whether the Giro d’Italia, one of the world’s great cycle races, should be called off as another leading team declared that the tour should be ended a week early.

It was also announced on Thursday that European soccer clubs could lose an estimated 5.2 to 6.3 billion euros ($6.1-7.4 billion) in revenues due to the impact of the pandemic, while in American Football, the Atlanta Falcons shut down their facility following one new positive test for COVID-19.

Rossi becomes the first MotoGP rider to contract the illness. “Unfortunately this morning I woke up and I was not feeling good,” he tweeted.

“My bones were sore and I had a slight fever, so I immediately called the doctor who tested me twice.

“The ‘quick PCR test’ result was negative, just like the test I underwent on Tuesday but the second one, of which the result was sent to me at 4pm this afternoon, was unfortunately positive. I am so disappointed that I will have to miss the race at Aragon.

“I am sad and angry because I did my best to respect the protocol, and although the test I had on Tuesday was negative, I self-isolated since my arrival from Le Mans (following the French Grand Prix at the weekend).”

In football, European Club Association chairman Andrea Agnelli spelt out the potential financial calamity for world soccer with the dire forecast about finances.

“Without competitions we don’t have access to certain items in our economic accounts and without these the system becomes unsustainable,” Agnelli, who also serves as the Juventus chairman, told a shareholder meeting of the Italian Serie A club.

Agnelli said the forecast included stadium losses, the impact the emergency had on medium-to-long-term commercial agreements and TV rights contracts that had to be renegotiated.

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