Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Testing replaces tailgating as Bills welcome fans

A limited number of fans are being allowed to attend Buffalo’s wild-card playoff game against the Indianapol­is Colts Saturday

- By JOHN WAWROW

ORCHARDPAR­K, N.Y. » Testing is replacing tailgating in the Bills Stadium parking lot, with a limited number of fans being allowed to attend Buffalo’s wild-card playoff game against the Indianapol­is Colts on Saturday.

Before that can happen, New York state guidelines require the approximat­e 6,700 fans, plus 200 employees and members of the media, first test negative for COVID-19 within 72 hours of kickoff. Each person must show his or her ID and proof of a negative test before being allowed in the outdoor facility, which seats about 70,000.

The tests will be held Wednesday and Thursday and conducted by New Jersey-based BioReferen­ce Laboratori­es.

The company is converting a portion of the expansive stadium lots into a drive-thru testing site. Tests will be done over 14-hour periods both days, feature 30 lanes to accommodat­e the number of people showing up and have the results returned within close to a 24-hour period.

“We have approximat­ely 150 staff who are in Buffalo to pull this thing off, who were arriving Saturday, Sunday, training and getting everything set up and ready to go,” BioReferen­ce executive chairman Jon Cohen said Tuesday.

Though the company has conducted more than 10 million COVID-19 tests since May, including NFL and NBA players and staff, this will be BioReferen­ce’s largest drivethru event and the first mandatory fan-testing program in the country, Cohen said.

The state considers the program a test run in granting the Bills permission to have fans attend a home game for the first time this season. Should all go well, the program has the potential of being used to open other New York venues, such as indoor sports arenas, music halls and even Broadway theaters.

“Everybody’s focused on what should be the game and the fans and everything, but this is also focused on how testing programs like this help re-open the New York State economy. That’s a very important issue,” Cohen said. “So it’s a broader brush than it just happens to be a sports event.”

Though a Bills’ win would guarantee them playing at home again the following week, there have been no discussion­s as to whether fans would be allowed to attend a second game, Cohen said.

“Everybody’s totally focused on getting the job done at hand, and then we’ll figure out if there’s going to be next steps,” Cohen said.

In Buffalo, there’s relief that members of the socalled Bills Mafia can finally see their AFC East champions in action up close. It will be Buffalo’s first home playoff appearance since a 30-27 loss to Jacksonvil­le on Dec. 28, 1996, in what proved to be Hall of Fame quarterbac­k Jim Kelly’s final game.

Not surprising­ly, the limited number of tickets sold out shortly after being made available on Thursday.

“It’s goose-bump material,” longtime season ticket holder Barbara Babiarz told Rochester’s WHEC-TV after landing two tickets. “I mean just the thought of being part of this playoff game as a fan when I couldn’t go at all for the whole season I just, there are no words to describe it.”

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he also plans to attend, while stressing fans be safe by wearing masks and maintainin­g social distancing in the stands and while entering and exiting the stadium.

 ?? BILL WIPPERT - FREELANCER, AP ?? Fans arrive to tailgate before an NFL football game between the Buffalo Bills and the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars in Orchard Park, N.Y., in this Sunday, Nov. 27, 2016, file photo.
BILL WIPPERT - FREELANCER, AP Fans arrive to tailgate before an NFL football game between the Buffalo Bills and the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars in Orchard Park, N.Y., in this Sunday, Nov. 27, 2016, file photo.

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