WRAPUP 1-Australian Grand Prix, Players golf cancelled as coronavirus shuts down sport

By Nick Mulvenney

SYDNEY, March 13 (Reuters) - The impact of the coronavirus pandemic on sport swept into the southern hemisphere on Friday with the cancellation of the Australian Formula One Grand Prix adding to an unprecedented shutdown of elite events and competitions around the globe.

Top European soccer leagues were placed on hold on Thursday, while the elite men's tennis circuit was suspended for six weeks, the NHL shut down and golf's prestigious Players Championship cancelled.

The Olympics, the biggest sports event of them all, go ahead as planned, Tokyo organisers insisted on Friday, a few hours after the flame was lit in ancient Olympia at the start of the torch relay.

The coronavirus outbreak has left sport administrators wrestling with the inherent contradiction of holding events designed to bring large numbers of people together at a time when governments are desperate to stop the spread of a virus transmitted by close contact.

England's hugely popular Premier League will hold an emergency meeting on Friday after Arsenal announced that club manager Mikel Arteta had tested positive for the coronavirus.

Leicester City manager Brendan Rodgers, who has three players in self-isolation after showing symptoms of the virus, said England should follow the lead of Italy, France, Spain and the Netherlands in suspending the season.

"There is absolutely no doubt, from a logical perspective. There's the public health and ethical side as well," he said.

With fans queuing at the gates of Albert Park in Melbourne early on Friday for the Formula One season-season opener, the race was cancelled just a few hours before the cars were scheduled to take to the track for the first time.

The decision came after a member of the McLaren team tested positive for the coronavirus and the British-based outfit scratched from the race, which attracts some 300,000 fans every year.

OLYMPICS GO AHEAD

In Tokyo, top Japanese government officials said they were determined to hold a "safe and secure" Olympics on schedule, a day after U.S. President Donald Trump said organisers should consider delaying them for a year because of the pandemic.

"I'm aware of President Trump's remarks," Japan's Olympics Minister Seiko Hashimoto told a news conference.

"The IOC (International Olympic Committee) and 2020 organisers are not at all considering cancelling or postponing the Games."

Fans at golf's Players Championship at least got to see the first round at Sawgrass on Thursday before the PGA announced a ban on spectators at all its events until April 5.