The easing of coronavirus restrictions will see up to 10,000 fans able to attend sports events in England from Monday.
Football, horse racing, rugby league and rugby union will be among the sports opening their doors to supporters on Monday ahead of Premier League crowds returning in midweek.
Here, the PA news agency charts the steps forwards and backwards on this issue since the pandemic struck the UK last year.
March 2020
The last major sports events without restrictions take place in the week beginning March 9, including Liverpool’s Champions League last-16 tie against Atletico Madrid at Anfield and racing’s Cheltenham Festival.
Elite sport is forced into suspension during the first national lockdown, and only emerges behind closed doors from the start of June.
July 17, 2020
The Government announces that spectators will return to trial events over the summer, with a view to a wider, socially distanced reopening of venues from October 1.
A two-day county cricket match between Surrey and Middlesex on July 26 and 27, the delayed 2020 World Snooker Championship from July 31 and the final day of the Glorious Goodwood racing festival on August 1 are among the first to be announced.
July 26, 2020
Spectators attend a sports event for the first time since March when the Surrey v Middlesex friendly match begins at The Oval.
July 31, 2020
Fans attend day one of the World Snooker Championship but Prime Minister Boris Johnson says the remainder of the event, along with the final day of Glorious Goodwood, must now take place behind closed doors due to a spike in cases.
August 13, 2020
The Government announces pilot events to test the safe return of spectators could resume from Saturday, August 15 – including the World Snooker final.
August 26, 2020
A new list of pilot events covering football, rugby union, horse racing, cricket, basketball and speedway is announced to take place over the remainder of August and September.
September 9, 2020
Spectators attend the St Leger Festival at Doncaster, the first race meeting with crowds since March. However, the course announces the rest of the meeting will be behind closed doors. A rise in infections not seen since the first lockdown forces the Government to limit attendances at pilot events to 1,000 spectators, or to revert to no crowds at all in areas where infection levels are especially high.
September 22, 2020
The Prime Minister announces the planned return of spectators to sports venues on a socially distanced basis from October 1 will now not go ahead due to a rise in coronavirus cases. He says the restrictions brought in would be in place for “perhaps six months”.
October 31, 2020
The country enters a second national lockdown, but elite sport is allowed to continue.
November 23, 2020
The Prime Minister announces that venues in tiers one and two of the Government’s new regional system to tackle infections will be able to open on a limited capacity basis from December 2.
December 2, 2020
EFL matches at Wycombe, Luton, Charlton, Shrewsbury, Carlisle and Cambridge go ahead with spectators in attendance, the first to do so since a series of pilot events in September.
Race meetings at Ludlow, Lingfield, Kempton and Haydock also welcome spectators in.
December 30, 2020
By the end of the year only the Isles of Scilly remain in either tier one or two. The match between Liverpool and West Brom on December 27 was the most recent Premier League fixture to be played in front of a 2,000 crowd. The last EFL fixtures with crowds were played at Plymouth, Shrewsbury and Barrow two days later.
February 22, 2021
The Prime Minister confirms the Government is proceeding with the plan to take the third step of the recovery road map, meaning sporting venues across England will be able to welcome back up to 10,000 spectators from May 17.