Jurgen Klopp said yesterday he was unsure whether closing stadiums would help tackle the coronavirus as Pep Guardiola admitted he did not like the idea of matches being played in empty stadiums. No restrictions have yet been placed on games played in Britain and Liverpool will host Atletico Madrid today in front of a capacity crowd of more than 50,000.
Nearly 3,000 Atletico fans are expected to travel for the game even though La Liga has announced that all matches in Spain will be played behind closed doors for the next two weeks. “Some things are more important than football, we realise that in this moment,” Liverpool boss Klopp said ahead of his side’s Champions League last-16, second-leg match.
“I don’t know enough about how much it would help with the football games. The problem with football games is if you are not at the stadium you are in closed rooms watching, maybe together. I’m not sure what is better in this case.”
Liverpool are expected to wrap up a first English league title in 30 years in the coming weeks but could do so in an empty stadium if authorities tighten the rules. The Champions League has been severely disrupted by the fast-spreading virus.
Paris Saint-Germain and Barcelona will play their second-leg matches behind closed doors, while it remains to be seen if Juventus can host Lyon next week with Italy in lockdown. Manchester City boss Guardiola believes it is only a matter of time before English clubs face further restrictions.
City play Arsenal at home today in a re-arranged Premier League game — when Guardiola will go head to head with his former assistant, Mikel Arteta. Guardiola, whose side are due to host Real Madrid in the Champions League next week, does not want a prolonged period of games without fans.
“We are here for the people. If it’s just one or two games, OK, but not longer,” he said. “We play for them and if they cannot be there, then there is no sense. I wouldn’t love it. But if (European governing body) UEFA or the government say we have to play without spectators, we will do it. The health is the most important thing and we have to take care of the situation.”
Sergio Aguero should be fit for the visit of the Gunners, while Kevin de Bruyne, who has missed the last two City games with a shoulder injury, is back in training and will be subject to a later fitness assessment. The Arsenal game is the first of two City must play before Liverpool are in action again – Guardiola’s team also face Burnley at home on Saturday while the leaders do not play until the Merseyside derby at Goodison on Monday night. 
With Liverpool needing six more points to secure the title, two successive City defeats could see them crowned without kicking a ball, though of all the permutations and possibilities surrounding the eventual moment when a 30-year wait is ended, Guardiola’s team losing two home games in succession is among the more outlandish.

Football should stop, says Wolves coach Santo
Wolves boss Nuno Espirito Santo, whose side are due to face Olympiakos in the Europa League on Thursday in an empty stadium in Greece, said football should stop instead of being played behind closed doors.
“If we have to go we will. But we don’t agree — we’re not happy to go,” he said. “Behind closed doors doesn’t make sense,” he added. “We’re pretending to live a normal life when things aren’t normal.”
On the pitch, Klopp is focused on overturning a 1-0 first-leg deficit against Atletico today to maintain his record of never losing a two-legged European tie in five years as Liverpool boss. 
Diego Simeone’s side frustrated the Reds in Spain three weeks ago and Klopp demanded a higher tempo from his side to unsettle Atletico’s famously well-organised defence.
“If you play predictable, Atletico defends you for the next six months without a rest,” said Klopp. “It is really good what they are doing, (I have the) highest respect, but there are ways and we have to find them tomorrow night.”
Captain Jordan Henderson and Andy Robertson will be fit to return from injury for Liverpool, but goalkeeper Alisson Becker remains sidelined by a hip problem.