Hartford Courant (Sunday)

A SEASON NOW ON THE BRINK

Don’t hold your breath, COVID-19 is going to wreck the 2020 NFL season

- By Ben Volin

Here is a new motto for the NFL’s 2020 season, though it’s not one that will sell too many jerseys or hats: “Don’t hold your breath.”

Don’t plan your big life events around the NFL schedule or count on attending a game this fall. Don’t worry too much if your favorite team isn’t having a good season, or if your fantasy team is struggling, or who is going to win the Super Bowl or MVP this year.

It’s all tenuous at best, given the current realities of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

COVID-19 is one opponent the NFL can’t game plan for. It is wild, unpredicta­ble, and will wreck everything in an instant.

The NFL is learning that the hard way this weekend. Even with a multimilli­on-dollar system of daily testing (six days a week), and social-distancing measures, and masks, and wearing contact tracing devices, and frequent disinfecti­ng, the NFL had to postpone two games in Week 4 due to COVID-19.

The Patriots-Chiefs game, one of the premier games of the NFL season and a massive ratings-grabber for CBS, had to be postponed until Monday or Tuesday (at the earliest) once Cam Newton was notified late Friday night that he had tested positive. And the Titans-Steelers game had to be pushed back to Week 7 after the Titans suffered a full-blown outbreak, with 18 players and staffers testing positive over an eightday span.

Football is a fun diversion for the time being, but don’t count on it being a consistent entertainm­ent option between now and February. And the 2020 season will likely go down as one giant asterisk. Sure, the Chiefs and Patriots may play Tuesday. But will anyone take it as legitimate if (when) Brian Hoyer starts instead of Newton? Will anyone be impressed by a Super Bowl champion who may win its trophy not by beingthebe­stteam,butbybeing­the team least affected by COVID-19?

The NFL will still try to squeeze the Patriots-Chiefs game into this weekend, but it would be incredibly risky. Although no Patriots players tested positive in follow-up tests Saturday, the incubation period can last up to seven days. The Titans discovered that last week, when they closed their team facility and sent everyone home Tuesday but had positive tests pop up Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday.

Even if the Patriots continue to pass tests Sunday and Monday, the last thing the NFL should do is pack up the Patriots and keep them in close quarters in an airplane, hotel, and buses for 48 hours. Instead, the Patriots should get the week off, and they should use the next eight days to get healthy and ready for the Week 5 game against the Broncos.

There is no obvious fix for rescheduli­ng Patriots-Chiefs, other than massively redrawing the schedule, or creating extra weeks at the end of the season. The easiest solution may also be the most prudent — simply canceling the game.

The NFL certainly doesn’t want a situation where teams are playing different numbers of games. Sorting out the playoff field won’t be easy when some teams have only played 14 games, and other teams have only played five division games, and so on.

But those are small potatoes. All that really matters is playing as many games as possible, and getting to the Super Bowl on Feb. 7 in Tampa. If it takes an unequal schedule to get there, so be it. Instead of focusing on the number of games lost, the NFL should be grateful for every game that gets played.

Frankly, it’s a miracle that it took this long for COVID-19 to wreck the schedule. Newton, believe it or not, is the first Patriots player to go on the COVID-IR list since testing began July 27. Training camp and the first three weeks of the season went so well that it looked like the NFL had figured out how to manage COVID-19.

But it was just a fortunate start, as we have quickly learned.

 ?? GETTY ?? Patriots head coach Bill Belichick talks with Cam Newton before a game against the Dolphins on Sept. 13 at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass.
GETTY Patriots head coach Bill Belichick talks with Cam Newton before a game against the Dolphins on Sept. 13 at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass.

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