Cancelling large sporting events 'not a major way to tackle this epidemic'
Chief Scientific Adviser Sir Patrick Vallance said: "On average, one person infects two or three others.
"You therefore have a very low probability of infecting a large number of people in a stadium and a rather higher probability of infecting people very close to you.
"And that means that most of the transmission actually tends to take place with friends and colleagues and those in close environments - and not in the big environments.
"Though it is true that any cancellation of things can have some effect, if you then get a displacement activity where you end up with everyone congregating somewhere else, you may actually perversely have an increased risk, particularly in an indoor environment.
"So it doesn't mean you shouldn't at some point make the decision from a resilience point but this is not a major way to tackle this epidemic."
___
Surely if you have a stadium full of 60,000. Off said 60,000 you may have 60 that are spreadsers. If those 60 infect 2-3 people you increasing the infection rate surely. You mutilply that across all saturday and sunday fixtures this weekend and infection rates could go through the roof.
Originally Posted by: Heavy Weather 2013