Three people have tested positive for the global pandemic at FC Koln and will be placed into a 14-day quarantine, the Bundesliga club said Friday in a potential blow to hopes of restarting the German football season this month.
"Cologne had the entire team and coaching staff, along with the backroom staff, tested on Thursday. Three people tested positive, all are symptom free," the club said in a statement on its website.
"After an assessment of the cases by the responsible health authorities, the three people who tested positive will go into a 14-day quarantine at home. Cologne will not confirm any names out of respect for the privacy of those affected."
The club said it would continue to train in preparation for the campaign to resume, with further tests to be carried out as part of the league's health and safety protocol.
"We now see in everyday life that our concept recognises and reduces risks at an early stage," said Tim Meyer, head of the German league's medical task force. We are convinced that with our concept, we can enable players to practice their profession with the best possible protection against infection."
The Bundesliga had set a target return date of May 9 but still needs permission from the German government.
A delay on the decision this week meant a resumption would not be possible before May 16. A final decision is expected next Wednesday. The German league confirmed Thursday that clubs had started testing players for the virus as part of plans to get the season up and running again.
It has been suspended since March 13.
Clubs returned to training at the start of April while adhering to social distancing guidelines and games would be played behind closed doors, with large-scale public events banned in Germany until August 31.
Borussia Dortmund chief executive Hans-Joachim Watzke warned last weekend that "the entire Bundesliga will go down" unless the league restarts.
Germany's top clubs are desperate for the season to be completed by June 30 in order to claim an instalment of television money worth 300 million euros ($325 million).
A return in May would make the Bundesliga the first top league in Europe to resume as Germany cautiously eases lockdown measures.
Nevertheless, there is heated debate about whether the Bundesliga should resume amid the pandemic which has so far claimed the lives of more than 6,000 people in Germany.
Paris Saint-Germain were declared Ligue 1 champions on Thursday after French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe announced sport could not resume in France before September.
Feature image courtesy: AFP / Inna Fassbender