National Post

49ers to play next two ‘ home’ games in Arizona

Ravens-steelers reset again, to Wednesday

- John Kryk

Don’t feel bad for the San Francisco 49ers. Having to play their next two home games on the road probably helps them.

Even if they have to borrow the home stadium of one of their division rivals, the Arizona Cardinals.

The Niners are 4-2 on the road this season, and 1- 4 at home, y’see.

But have some pity for those Baltimore Ravens and Pittsburgh Steelers team members and players who have been following every strict league COVID- 19 protocol to a T. Their game got postponed a third time on Monday.

Repor ts said Tuesday night’s twice- delayed Baltimore at Pittsburgh game has been moved again, to Wednesday at 3:40 p.m. EST (NBC).

This, after at least one more Ravens player tested positive Monday for the coronaviru­s. And also, according to reports, because some Ravens player were threatenin­g to boycott the game until their team could hold at least one practice beforehand.

The NFL reportedly ordered the Ravens to cancel Monday’s practice — which would have been its first in more than a week — presumably because of the continuing string of positive tests, which imply the team’s outbreak perhaps is not yet under control, as the league had indicated.

More than 20 Ravens players and several team members have been quarantine­d in the last eight days either for being infected with COVID-19, or as highrisk close contacts of the infected.

Pittsburgh’s scheduled home game this Sunday against Washington will be moved to the following day, Dec. 7, at 5 p. m. EST ( network TBD), while Dallas at Baltimore is moved again, from that day and time to next Tuesday at 8: 05 p. m. EST (FOX).

As for the 49ers, if you missed it on the weekend, public- health officials in Santa Clara County — where the 49ers’ headquarte­rs and home stadium are located, about an hour’s drive south of San Francisco — issued an emergency, pandemic- battling directive that has gone into effect for the next three weeks.

It bans all sports practices and games involving player- to- player contact. That means football, of course.

The Niners were scheduled to play home games at Levi’s Stadium this coming Monday, against Buffalo, and on Sunday, Dec. 13 against Washington.

On Monday the 49ers announced they reached an agreement with the Arizona Cardinals and the NFL to play host to their home games against Buffalo and Washington at State Farm Stadium in the Phoenix suburb of Glendale, where the Cardinals call home.

“The Cardinals organizati­on, State Farm Stadium and league officials have been supportive and accommodat­ing as we work through the many logistical issues involved in relocating games,” the Niners said in a statement.

Still to be determined by late afternoon Monday is where the 49ers will hold practices until the Santa Clara COVID-19 directive expires at 5 a. m. PST on Monday, Dec. 21.

Another quandary for the club could be that the county’s “mandatory directive” includes the requiremen­t that “persons entering the county” must “quarantine for 14 days upon return from travel of more than 150 miles (242 km).”

Glendale, Ariz., is some 700 km away. So must all 49ers team personnel leave the county — and their families — for the next three weeks? And whether they do or don’t, must they all quarantine for 14 days upon their return? If so, how are they supposed to play their final two regular-season games?

Answers to those questions were still unknown publicly by late Monday afternoon.

The timing of Santa Clara County’s bombshell on Saturday afternoon caught everyone employed by the 49ers off-guard, from ownership on down. They learned literally when everyone was boarding their flight to Los Angeles.

He a d coach Ky l e Shanahan still didn’t sound happy about it following Sunday’s win over the Rams, when asked where the team would practise and play through Dec. 20.

“You guys want to know the answer. So do our wives, so does everyone who knows us,” Shanahan said. “We’re working our tails off to try to figure it out.

“For all our players and coaches and everyone on that plane — and our wives — to find that out while we’re getting on a plane, and no one to tell us, it was just extremely disappoint­ing ... We can handle anything, and we understand how big of a deal this virus is …

“But to find that out through a tweet or a press conference, where I have an entire plane coming up to me, I have all wives, everyone’s girlfriend­s, everyone’s family members, kids, saying what they heard … ‘ Are we going to be gone for the entire month of December? Are we going to be quarantine­d for 14 days when we get back?’ That’s all we could talk about for the last 18 hours.”

Elsewhere, the Denver Broncos’ coronaviru­s test results Monday morning all came back negative. The team’s three quarterbac­ks parked Saturday on Covid-19/reserve — Drew Lock, Brett Rypien and Blake Bortles — tested negative Monday, along with the rest of the team.

All three were in quarantine Sunday and unable to play against the New Orleans Saints. The Broncos’ emergency QB, practice- squad wide receiver Kendall Hilton, took most of the snaps with only a few hours of preparatio­n. New Orleans won 31-3.

The still- quarantine­d trio might be punished further for breaching protocols late last week, head coach Vic Fangio said Monday.

All NFL teams but Monday- night combatants Seattle and Philadelph­ia, plus the Ravens and Steelers, were ordered by the league on Saturday to work remotely this week until Wednesday, to try to stem the coronaviru­s tide. More than 40 players last week were parked on COVID- 19/ reserve, either for contractin­g the virus or as a high- risk close contact of someone who had.

Don’t discount the Minnesota Vikings from reaching the playoffs again.

Since starting 0-3 and 1-5, Mike Zimmer’s Vikings have won four of five. They’re now 5- 6.

And with three of their last five opponents being Jacksonvil­le, Chicago and Detroit, their post- season hopes might rest on how they fare against Tampa Bay on Dec. 13 and New Orleans on Christmas Day.

“We’ve still got a lot of football left to play,” Zimmer said.

The NFL on Monday firmed up its Christmas weekend schedule.

Since April, five matchups had been under considerat­ion for three time slots on Boxing Day — Saturday, Dec. 26. The league has settled on Tampa Bay at Detroit ( 1 p. m. EST), San Francisco at Arizona ( 4: 30 p. m. EST) and Miami at Las Vegas (8:15 p.m. EST).

The Minnesota- New Orleans Christmas Day game kicks off at 4:30 p.m. EST.

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