Chicago Sun-Times

HOW NFL SQUANDERED HEAD START WITH VIRUS

Want NFL to address their concerns with coronaviru­s on rise

- PATRICK FINLEY pfinley@suntimes.com | @patrickfin­ley

Bears outside linebacker Khalil Mack and the NFL’s biggest stars began a social-media blitz around noon Sunday, lobbying for owners to agree to coronaviru­s protocols with the start of training camp approachin­g like a blitzing pass rusher.

“NFL, please address health and safety concerns so we can play football this year! #itsonlyrig­ht #cantwait,” Mack wrote on Twitter.

The coordinate­d push by the NFL Players Associatio­n tried to re-create baseball’s viral moment six weeks ago, when MLB Players Associatio­n head Tony Clark said to “tell us when and where.” Clark’s statement was reiterated and retweeted by players across the sport. It generated momentum but yielded limited results. Rather than agree to a deal with baseball’s owners, the union reserved the right to file a grievance and let the commission­er declare the start of the season. On Sunday night, the Cubs and White Sox played the first major sports exhibition in the city since March.

Pro football, meanwhile, was supposed to be the sport with time on its side. The coronaviru­s lockdown began the month after the Super Bowl and six months before the start of the regular season.

That time has been squandered.

The NFL, the only one of America’s four major sports leagues to not change its regular-season schedule because of the virus, still hasn’t figured out the basics. And its first deadline looms Monday.

Even if the sides reach a deal before then — and they are motivated to try — one wonders why an agreement had to be so difficult. Infection rates have surged across the country, making the coronaviru­s more intimidati­ng in many NFL markets than it was months ago. But that shouldn’t have prevented agreement on economic, medical and structural issues.

The union wants its players to be tested daily, while the owners prefer every other day. As of Friday, 65 NFL players had tested positive at some point this offseason for the virus, the union said.

A joint medical committee formed by the league and the union recommende­d a longer training-camp acclimatio­n period to make up for the lack of team-driven offseason workouts, but the sides can’t agree on how that suggestion should be implemente­d. The union refused to report to training camp early and instead wants all preseason games canceled to allow for the acclimatio­n. The owners want two preseason games.

Also at issue are details surroundin­g an opt-out clause for players. The union said Friday that no players have formally said they’ll stay home, but the MLB and NBA restarts have proved that it’s only a matter of time. Complicati­ng matters: Unlike MLB and NBA players, football players don’t have guaranteed contracts.

The collective-bargaining agreement dictates that players must report to training camp July 28. Rookies can arrive Tuesday, quarterbac­ks and injured players Thursday.

The Texans and Super Bowl champion

Chiefs can welcome rookies Monday, though, because they’re playing in the regular-season opener on a Thursday night. That’s the league’s first deadline and the impetus for negotiatio­ns in private and, with a #wewanttopl­ay hashtag, in the court of public opinion.

Players will report. If the sides haven’t agreed on their issues by Monday, the union could attempt to file a grievance for unsafe work conditions.

Sunday featured some saber-rattling. Sam Acho, the former Bears linebacker and current NFLPA vice president, tweeted the NFL “waited until the last minute and ignored the recommenda­tions of experts.” Still, it’s hard not to sympathize with Seahawks quarterbac­k Russell Wilson, who tweeted that he was concerned because his wife is pregnant and the league still has “no clear plan on player health and family safety.”

NFLPA president J.C. Tretter, the Browns center, said the league “needs to listen to our union and adopt the experts’ recommenda­tions.”

The sides are negotiatin­g. The clock is ticking.

And fans are wondering why, despite a four-month head start, it has to come down to the wire.

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 ?? JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Bears outside linebacker Khalil Mack tried to put some pressure on the NFL on Sunday.
JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES Bears outside linebacker Khalil Mack tried to put some pressure on the NFL on Sunday.
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TWITTER.COM
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