As the Premier League continues to squabble over Project Restart, Germany's Bundesliga clubs are putting the finishing touches on their preparations for the less catchily named 'Wiederaufnahme des Spielbetriebs'.
In England, the debate over resuming the season in neutral venues has divided the league. The head of the UK's football police unit has told clubs opposing plans to play at neutral grounds to 'get a grip'.
English football has taken a step closer to using their own grounds but nothing has been agreed as yet while Germany's plan will see all 18 Bundesliga clubs - as well as 18 more in the second tier - allowed to hold games at their home grounds.
That means that for the next few weeks, full first-team squads will be regularly ferried between hotels and stadiums around the country, albeit under strict hygiene regulations to minimise the risk of infection.
So why have home and away fixtures not caused problems in Germany when they have sparked such debate in England?
Part of the reason is simply a difference in political approach. While the UK's lockdown measures emphasised restrictions on travelling long distances, in Germany, the issue has been less significant. Some states did briefly close their internal borders and Germans were initially urged to avoid domestic holidays, but there was no ban per se on travelling.
That made it easier for the German Football League (DFL) to push for a restart plan which, in their words, allowed them to complete the season in a 'relatively conventional sporting way' by the end of June.
In logistical terms, the nature of German stadiums also makes it easier to maintain uniform regulations on social distancing and hygiene measures.
Of the 18 Bundesliga arenas, a vast majority have either been built or fully renovated in the 21st century. While stadiums such as Old Trafford and Stamford Bridge have undergone more piecemeal changes, even older German stadiums such as Cologne's Mungersdorfer Stadion have undergone full-scale renovations to transform them into modern arenas.
While the Premier League hosts grounds as diverse as Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, Selhurst Park and Bramall Lane, the Bundesliga's stadiums have more uniform, modern facilities.
Even more charismatic, smaller grounds like Union Berlin's Alte Foersterei have undergone recent makeovers, meaning Freiburg are the only club with a truly old-fashioned stadium.
The wealth of new-builds also means that there is less of a danger of fans assembling outside the stadiums on match day.
Where stadiums such as the Emirates and Anfield are built directly into residential areas, most major Bundesliga grounds such as Bayern's Allianz Arena and Schalke's Veltins Arena are out-of-town complexes, accessible only by specific, easily controllable transport links.
According to the DFL plan, the clubs are responsible for ensuring fans do not gain access to the stadium grounds, while it is up to local police to control the area around the grounds.
In some cases, the league has adapted to meet law enforcement demands. Union Berlin's clash with Bayern next weekend, for example, was moved from Saturday to Sunday so as not to coincide with anti-lockdown demonstrations in the Berlin capital.
Yet even with all the precautions, German clubs are relatively confident that fans will not assemble outside the stadiums. Though Borussia Monchengladbach fans did just that back in March, opinions on so-called 'ghost games' have changed since then. While most fan groups remain firmly against the league restart, none have announced they will protest.
'I don't think that the fan organisations want to do their critics, who stereotype them, a favour by behaving in such a way,' said DFL boss Christian Seifert last week. He and various club bosses insisted that there were 'no signs' of mass support gatherings.
All plain sailing then? Not quite. Germany's federal system means that the Bundesliga may still be forced to revert to neutral venues if things start to go wrong.
Angela Merkel and the leaders of the federal states have approved the DFL plan in principle, but under federalism, the final decision on whether to let games go ahead is made by the local health authority.
With hotels and stadiums sometimes in different districts, that means that each game may need the green light from several different health authorities, and a full matchday is dependent on dozens of approvals.
As the case of Dynamo Dresden showed last weekend, just one stubborn health authority can completely blow up the Bundesliga's careful preparations. After two positive tests, local officials ordered a 14-day quarantine for Dresden players on Saturday, thereby cancelling their game next weekend against Hannover.
If similar cases continue to pop up among top-flight clubs, then the plan to finish the season by the end of June could be ripped to shreds. Though Seifert has insisted there is enough of a buffer in the current calendar to reschedule cancelled games, the DFL will almost certainly be working on a Plan B for the worst-case scenario.
Back in March, the idea of neutral venues and a mini-tournament were still very much on the table in Germany. And depending on how many positive cases there are in the coming weeks, the Bundesliga too may soon be squabbling over Project Restart.