AFC WIMBLEDON say sides who postpone games due to Covid outbreaks should be “held to account” by the EFL.
Only nine of the 33 scheduled fixtures across the EFL were played on Boxing Day as the virus continues to cause disruption around the country.
Wanderers’ matches against Wycombe and Morecambe were postponed after 14 players tested positive, and Wednesday’s trip to Burton has now also been called off.
According to current EFL rules, teams are expected to fulfil their fixtures as long as they have 14 players available including a goalkeeper.
However, Wimbledon have called for strong deterrents to ensure that all games go ahead as planned.
A club statement read: “The pandemic certainly takes no prisoners but ever since it struck, we have taken exhaustive measures to protect our players and ensure we were always able to field a starting XI.
“We have managed to do that on a fraction of the resources enjoyed by many of the teams in our division and yet now we are left with cancelled games and fixture chaos, which puts greater strain on our already depleted squad.
“As a result of this, we have sent a strongly-worded letter to the EFL spelling out how we feel and calling on them, as our governing body, to take a much stronger stance going forward.”
The Dons also called for the number of substitutes per match to be increased from three to five in order to combat their congested fixture list caused by recent postponements.
Here is Wimbledon’s full letter to the EFL
We are writing to openly express our disappointment over the recent spate of matches that member clubs have been unable to fulfil.
We also want to take this opportunity to call on the EFL to undertake its due processes and implement the strongest-possible measures to ensure that - where a club is able to fulfil a fixture - it does so.
Further, where it is found that a club was unable to fulfil a fixture, they must be held to account for all decisions which led to that position.
We would also like to advocate for the reintroduction of five substitutions per match. With a congested fixture calendar now a guarantee for all clubs, we would wish to have every tool available to us in order to manage our squad best.
At the point of writing, six of the 10 fixtures on EFL League One’s Boxing Day schedule cannot be fulfilled. On the weekend of the 18th December, six of the 12 scheduled matches did not go ahead, again because the matches could not be fulfilled.
AFC Wimbledon has one of the smallest playing budgets in the league and alongside this, one of the smallest first-team playing squads. The club is a London club, where coronavirus has been most rife. A State of Emergency has been declared by the Mayor of London. Yet since the new Omicron variant became prevalent, only 11 cases of coronavirus have been recorded in our playing squad and first-team management (of which only three have been in our player and staff first-team bubble).
This is not by luck. This is down to hard work and spending resources our club ultimately does not have at its disposal.
This is the players sacrificing their ability to spend time with their loved ones. Christmas gatherings have been cancelled and everyone at the club has played their part; the players have to be truly commended for their commitment.
At significant cost, we have tested players twice weekly since the beginning of the season. In the weeks before the Red Zone protocols were brought into effect, we upped this to three tests per week.
We then moved to Red Zone protocols with daily testing in the week before the EFL’s announcement of such measures.
The club has isolated individuals and chosen not to select players for match-day squads. We have taken some very difficult decisions to manage our squad, which most likely led to a loss of on-field competitiveness.
Training has been impacted by the immediate removal or our U23 and loan players from our training group (due to the likelihood of exposure to Covid-19 at their non-league loan clubs).
If we can make all this work - on such limited resources - then so should the rest.
AFC Wimbledon understands that we are not alone in undertaking these measures and acknowledges some clubs may well have gone further.
However, we can’t help feeling the preventative measures taken by the club ultimately cost us a competitive edge on the pitch earlier in the season. Yet now, when our measures are truly coming into their own, we have been hit financially with the postponement of our two-largest revenued fixtures of the season.
Whilst acknowledging that two further dates have been created in the fixture list (with the removal of Emirates FA Cup Replay dates in Rounds 3 and 4), no team would enter this competition with the hope of getting a replay.
You play to win first time around, thus giving entrance into the next round and alleviating potential fixture congestion. We will now be forced into playing these matches, at a rapid turnaround, which will have a serious effect on the players’ physical and mental welfare.
It just doesn’t sit right that, having gone above and beyond our means to ensure matches can be fulfilled, we will now be at a disadvantage - trying to navigate a very congested second half of the season with a small squad.
Meanwhile, clubs with larger squads will have the upper hand, having been provided the opportunity to take a more relaxed approach knowing there will be no penalties for conduct that sits outside of the protocols.
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