Daniele Rugani and Blaise Matuidi made complete recovery from COVID-19.

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Daniele Rugani and Blaise Matuidi each healed from coronavirus and reported negative results, Juventus confirmed.


France International Matuidi announced that he had been infected with the virus a week after Italy's midfielder, Rugani, was the first Serie A player to conduct a positive check.
Juventus confirmed that both players had undergone swab checks that had come out healthy, suggesting that they would no longer have to be separated.

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According to the statement of club, "Rugani and Matuidi undertook, as per procedure, a double check with diagnostic testing for coronavirus. 'The testing returned with negative findings. The players have since healed and are no longer subject to the home isolation program." Rugani and Matuidi were two of the three Juve players to acquire coronavirus, while Argentine midfielder Paulo Dybala has tested positive.

It was confirmed last week that sport would stay suspended in Italy after its Prime Minister prolonged the national lock-up to 3 May.
On Wednesday, the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) suggested that players and personnel of Serie A clubs will be screened for coronavirus and then separated in training camps before they continue planning for the start of the season.

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The suggestion would be one of the recommendations drawn up by the FIGC Medical Committee to insure that the season, which has been on pause since the outbreak of coronavirus on 9 March, will resume safely.

The FIGC hopes that the preparation will begin directly after the existing lockout concludes on May 3. Italy has been one of the countries most impacted by the disease, and players in many Serie A clubs have been among those afflicted.

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In order to restart football securely, it is necessary at this point to establish the best available protocols to restore play when the entire country begins again - (FIGC President Gabriele Gravina).

We operate without urgency, but not without pause, so that we are ready when the agencies send us the green light.

The FIGC specified that, at the start of the season, each team will establish a community of teams, medical personnel, physicians, physiotherapists and other workers who are "fully pessimistic" and separate them in a summer-style season camp.

The guideline indicated that all members of the community would be screened for coronavirus 96 hours prior to the start of the camp and recommended a phased start to the season-with Series A moving first, preceded by Series B and then Series C.

The FIGC claims it's ready to finish the season, which still has 12 out of 38 matchdays to go, while certain clubs wish it to be called off.