The Hamilton Spectator

Somehow, the NFL pulled off playing every game in pandemic

- ROB MAADDI

TAMPA, FLA. — Playing a contact sport in the middle of a pandemic seemed unthinkabl­e to everyone except the National Football League when the novel coronaviru­s shut down the country in March.

The improbable became achievable thanks to collaborat­ion and sacrifice.

Super Bowl LV takes place Sunday right on schedule. That was the plan all along. The league played 256 games in the regular season without any cancellati­ons and made it through the playoffs to get here.

The NFL spent more than $75 million on testing alone, played games on all seven days of the week, shuffled the schedule numerous times, and constantly revised health and safety protocols. It paid off.

“There’s so many people that had to work together to get this done,” NFL commission­er Roger Goodell said Thursday. “There were doubters. Obviously, there were people that didn’t believe we could do it. Obviously, we had a lot of unknowns. But we believed that staying on schedule and working toward trying to get to 256 games done — as we sort of say shorthand, avoid the asterisk.”

Fresh off contentiou­s negotiatio­ns for a new collective bargaining agreement, the league and the players’ union worked together to ensure health and safety were paramount. That meant the Denver Broncos had to play a game with a practice squad receiver as their quarterbac­k. Cleveland had a playoff game with coach Kevin Stefanski at home on his couch.

“We have worked together to find solutions and work past our difference­s,” Goodell said. “We’ve had our dustups in the past. But this season it really took all of us to get through this.”

NFL Players Associatio­n executive director DeMaurice Smith even joined Goodell on stage toward the end of his news conference in a seemingly celebrator­y moment.

“This year has been, I think across businesses in the country, one of the best of labour and management working together to do something we couldn’t do alone,” Smith said.

There were nervous moments along the way as several teams experience­d breakouts. The league had to impose intensive protocol measures to prevent disaster and keep things going.

“It started in Tennessee where we weren’t sure how to control this, what was causing this,” Goodell said. “Those were some anxious days, there’s no question about it. But we believed in our medical experts. We believed in the protocols. We were able to get that under control, and we learned a lot from that, that we then applied and changed, and I think that helped us.”

Contact tracing devices worn by players, coaches and team personnel played a vital role in the process. Ultimately, the league learned through extensive research and data analysis there was no on-field transmissi­on of the virus during games or practices.

Goodell said the goal was not to avoid positives because that wasn’t realistic with approximat­ely 7,500 tests per day. Rather, the league focused on daily testing, identifyin­g positive cases and isolating quickly. Overall, the league accumulate­d nearly one million tests.

Though stadiums were empty most of the season, 1.2 million fans attended games when allowed. About 22,000 fans will be in attendance when Kansas City (16-2) meets hometown Tampa Bay (14-5) on Sunday. Everyone in the stands will be required to wear a mask.

“We want our fans to be safe,” Goodell said. “They need to be smart.”

Just as it seems the NFL was for much of the last five months.

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