Talks with managers and players have paved the way for the Premier League to seek agreement on protocols for a safe return to training.
The Premier League invited club captains and bosses to share their thoughts on a return to action during conference calls on Wednesday, according to Independent.
The league now hopes to get the backing of clubs for its plans at a shareholders’ meeting on Monday.
A Covid-19 testing programme would then quickly follow with clubs possibly back in training later in the week.
The meeting followed the publication of government guidelines for the first phase of a return to training for elite athletes, which involves training individually or in small groups while engaging in social distancing. Footballers would also need to have one-to-one discussions where the risks are explained to them.
The government still needs to give its assent to restart the first stage and there would be a delay before a second phase of training, involving closer contact and tackling, is approved.
Reports claim managers expressed concerns that the arrangements failed to address safe ways to engage in contact training, thus making it difficult to get players match fit.
Captains will seek feedback from their squads in the meantime and those views could be further fed into Monday’s meeting.
Players including Manchester City winger Raheem Sterling and England full-back Danny Rose – who is on loan at Newcastle from Tottenham – have this week publicly expressed serious reservations about a return to action.
It is understood players received an eight-page document outlining Premier League protocols for a resumption of training this week.
Although player safety is the biggest hurdle to plans to restart the competition behind closed doors in mid-June, agreements will also have to be secured on issues such as whether games will be played at neutral venues or continue on a home-and-away basis, and whether the former should lead to relegation being abandoned.
Bottom club Norwich have also claimed relegation should be scrapped if the Sky Bet Championship season cannot be completed.
Canaries sporting director Stuart Webber said: “What we could not accept is a situation where we play all our games and get relegated, but the Championship can’t play, and they automatically promote some teams who haven’t finished the season.
“For anyone who has got promoted from the Championship, it is a 46 or 49 game slog. It needs to be settled on the pitch – both coming up and going down.”