The Peterborough Examiner

Athletes can get in line for vaccine

Sports leagues know vaccinatio­n line is one line they can’t cross

- TIM DAHLBERG

“There was never any thought about us jumping the line, or anything like that.” GARY BETTMAN NHL COMMISSION­ER

The world may yet gather in Tokyo this summer for an Olympics already postponed once because of the pandemic.

Listen to Olympic officials, and it’s almost a certainty. Thomas Bach made that clear Wednesday when he vowed that the Olympics would be staged in July and that this time there is no backup plan.

One other thing the president of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee claims is certain: They won’t be stealing your vaccine shots to make the games happen.

Bach said Wednesday the IOC was “not in favour of athletes jumping queue” to obtain vaccines, which he said should go first to health-care workers and then to those in high risk of severe complicati­ons from COVID-19.

That’s comforting to know, assuming the IOC sticks to the commitment not to jump lines. It’s also a 180-degree turn from what another top Olympic official said a week earlier when quizzed on how the games could go ahead as planned in July.

Dick Pound, a Canadian and former IOC vice-president, was tasked with floating the idea that getting athletes vaccinated early would pave the way for the games to begin July 23 as now scheduled.

“In Canada where we might have 300 or 400 athletes — to take 300 or 400 vaccines out of several million in order to have Canada represente­d at an internatio­nal event of this stature, character and level — I don’t think there would be any kind of a public outcry about that,” Pound told Sky News. Think again.

Pound’s trial balloon landed with a thud felt far from Ottawa, and with good reason. Imagine, if you will, the optics of healthy young athletes getting vaccines so they can play sports while older people desperatel­y refresh their browsers to try to find shots so they can hug their grandchild­ren.

Indeed, while sports leagues early in the pandemic secured testing the general public couldn’t get, the line seems to have been drawn when it comes to getting the vaccine early. The World Health Organizati­on is on record as saying athletes should not receive priority, and the major sports leagues aren’t pushing — at least publicly — to get theirs first.

“We’re not jumping the line,” National Basketball Associatio­n medical vice-president Dr. Leroy Sims told The Undefeated over the weekend.

Neither is the National Hockey League, even if it means Canadian and American teams may not be meeting this season because of virus restrictio­ns.

“We’re going to get in line with everybody else,” NHL commission­er Gary Bettman said earlier this month. “There was never any thought about us jumping the line, or anything like that.”

That’s good news for those anxiously awaiting inoculatio­ns. It’s also a reflection the major sports leagues understand the vaccinatio­n line is the one line they can’t cross.

For nearly a year now, leagues have fought through the pandemic and crowned champions in major sports. The Super Bowl is just days away and somehow the National Football League has done what seemed impossible for quite some time — make it through a season with all games played.

Still, imagine what a vaccine will mean to sports going forward.

A vaccine that would allow the NBA and NHL to relax restrictio­ns on both players and fans, and assure baseball players can go to spring training not having to worry every moment about the virus playing havoc with their health.

It will eventually happen, of course. Things may never be exactly the same as they once were, but they will be close enough for the return of sports as we knew them.

For now, though, it’s a waiting game for the leagues, much like it is for everyone at home. They may not be refreshing browsers hourly to see if appointmen­t times have opened, but rest assured they will be ready to pounce when it finally comes time for players to get their shots.

Meanwhile, there will be some fans at the Super Bowl — and in a stroke of marketing genius the NFL is inviting 7,500 vaccinated health-care workers to be a part of the crowd, free of charge.

The vaccinatio­ns can’t come soon enough for everyone, sports included. We want the Olympics this summer in all its glory, just like we want baseball games played in stadiums before cheering fans.

But no one gets to cut in line. Because that just wouldn’t be playing fair.

 ?? MIKE STOBE GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? The commission­ers of major profession­al sports, including the NHL’s Gary Bettman, know the optics of young, healthy athletes getting COVID-19 vaccines ahead of seniors and health-care workers would not be a good one for their leagues.
MIKE STOBE GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO The commission­ers of major profession­al sports, including the NHL’s Gary Bettman, know the optics of young, healthy athletes getting COVID-19 vaccines ahead of seniors and health-care workers would not be a good one for their leagues.

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