LONDON: The chief executive of English football giants Liverpool has offered the club’s stewards to local supermarkets as customers clamber for goods amid the coronavirus outbreak.
“Message to supermarket managers here on Merseyside,” wrote Liverpool Football Club chief executive Peter Moore on Twitter. “Our stadium stewards here @LFC are offering their time and expertise in volunteering to help with crowd control, queue management, parking control, assisting the elderly and infirm taking their groceries to their cars, etc.
“They are truly the best in the business and would be delighted to help in whatever way you would deem appropriate (and safe) on your premises. Please DM me so that I can put you in contact. #YNWA (You’ll Never Walk Alone), he added, referencing the Liverpool anthem.
There have been reports of British supermarket workers facing abuse amid panic buying as customers scramble for food and other items during the coronavirus outbreak.
Northwest side Liverpool, who have not been crowned champions of England since 1990, are currently a huge 25 points clear at the top of the Premier League table. But with the competition currently suspended, there is still some doubt over whether the champions-elect will win their first English title of the Premier League era this season.
This still taken from a video released on November 13, 2023, shows participants during a horse race in Lahore. —...
A polo player in action at the Lahore Polo Club. — Facebook@LahorePoloClub/FileLAHORE:FG/Din Polo won the Patrons’...
England's Ben Stokes and Joe Root in action during a match against Pakistan in the 2023 ICC World in Kolkata. —...
Manchester United Manager Ruben Amorim. —AFP/FileLONDON: Manchester United crashed to a humiliating 3-0 home defeat...
Ukraine's Oleksandr Usyk gets the measure of Britain's Tyson Fury in Usyk's unanimous decision victory in their...
An undated picture of Rawalpindi crowd and Islamabad United players celebrating winning the PSL 9 title on March 18,...