London: Ace English seamer Mark Wood on Wednesday said that the coronavirus pandemic has burst the bubble in which sportspersons, at times, live, as they are as vulnerable as a common man is to the unprecedented challenges posed by the global health crisis.
The COVID-19 pandemic has so far killed over 80,000 globally and infected nearly 1.5 million and Wood said he too worries about his family's health.
"There are times when professional sportsmen and women exist in our own bubble. The coronavirus crisis has burst that bubble. Instead of thinking about fitness, performance or the next match, our concerns are exactly the same as everyone else's," the 30-year-old wrote in a column for a British newspaper.
"It's a scary time, one that has made me anxious for the health of my family and friends. I've worried about my parents and grandparents. I've got friends who work in the NHS and it's so sad to hear what they are going through, along with all the stress that is being put on hospitals.
"Just because I play cricket for England doesn't make me immune from the challenges the whole country is facing. I've queued up outside the supermarket and I've shaved my head because I'm not sure when I'll next be able to get a haircut," he said.
With the pandemic putting countries in lockdown mode to contain the disease, Wood too is at home and he is hoping this break will help him recover from an injury, which had ruled him out of the Sri Lanka series.
"Before the coronavirus crisis ramped up, I had the disappointment of being ruled out of the tour to Sri Lanka ... The side injury is similar to what I suffered in the World Cup final, just not quite as a severe," he wrote.