Children's grassroots sport played outside of school will be suspended during England's four-week lockdown, says culture secretary Oliver Dowden. There were calls for youth sport to be exempt when the new restrictions come into effect from tomorrow. But Dowden confirmed it would only be permitted in school.

 

"Unfortunately we need to pause grassroots sport outside school to reduce the transmission risk from households mixing," he tweeted. "As soon as we can resume this, we will."

Elite sport can continue behind closed doors during the lockdown.

 

Former Wales midfielder Robbie Savage, who coaches a junior team, criticised the decision to suspend children's sport in a series of tweets.

 

Quoting Dowden's tweet, he said: "Have you or any of your senior government officials been to a grassroots game since lockdown? Do you have any idea what it's like for thousands of grassroots volunteers? Do you know the impact of this decision on youngsters' mental and physical wellbeing?"

 

Youth Sports Trust chief executive Ali Oliver earlier said that under a quarter of secondary schools do not offer physical education.

 

"To lose some grassroots clubs will leave us with a legacy of a generation who are inactive and unable to find a way into sport," she said. Former Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport select committee chair Damian Collins had written to Dowden asking the government to allow youth sport to continue in England after 5 November.

 

He called on the government to extend the definition of elite sport to include academy players at Premier League clubs and those in development centres such as the England Rugby developing player programme and Sport England's talented athlete scholarship scheme.

 

"Young people will currently be allowed to continue with sport at school, and we believe that the risks to the spread of the coronavirus from outdoor grassroots youth sport would be minimal," he said, in a letter also signed by former sports ministers Tracey Crouch and Helen Grant.

 

"There would, however, be clear and lasting benefits for these young people if the government could support this." Leisure centres and gyms will close, as will other indoor and outdoor leisure facilities.

 

Prime Minister Boris Johnson told the House of Commons that there would be no exemptions.