Las Vegas Review-Journal

No basement-bound draft this time for commission­er

NFL’S Goodell plans on being in Cleveland

- By Tom Withers

CLEVELAND — Roger Goodell’s leaving his man cave for this year’s NFL draft. The commission­er missed welcoming new players last year — and being booed.

“He’s excited to get out of the basement,” joked league executive Peter O’reilly.

A year after a three-day stop in Las Vegas was scrapped and one of its signature events had to go virtual because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the league announced Monday initial plans for this year’s draft in Cleveland, where thousands of fans will be safely welcomed in a step toward normalcy.

Goodell hosted last year’s draft from home, but he’ll be on hand for this year’s event, which will incorporat­e all the health and safety protocols learned by the league over the past year as well as the city’s best known locations along Lake Erie — Firstenerg­y Stadium, home of the Browns and the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

Before announcing picks, one of Goodell’s duties on the first night is to open the draft, a moment followed by a chorus of loud, playful boos.

This year, they’ll be music to his ears.

The NFL feels confident it can hold a large-scale event after a successful run at this year’s Super Bowl in Tampa, Florida. And, given the events of the past year, the league feels this draft can have an even deeper meaning than just teams picking new players.

“The draft is every year about hope. It’s about fans having hope with new players, clubs having hope,” said O’reilly, vice president, club business & league events. “The weather turning in parts of the country to spring, and the hope that comes with that.

“But this year, probably more than ever, is about coming together and signaling a brighter future and communitie­s being able to come together safely with the right protocols and pointing to what’s ahead.”

With health and safety guidelines changing almost daily, the league does not yet have an “exact” figure of how many fans will be allowed to attend the free outdoor festivitie­s associated with thes draft, which coincides with the Browns’ 75th anniversar­y season.

Masks will be required and provided, and the league will use many of the same health protocols implemente­d last season to accommodat­e “tens of thousands” of fans.

“The general message is that certainly we want to welcome fans, not only from Cleveland but outside as well,” O’reilly said.

The league is continuing to work with officials on final safety protocols, with a priority on social distancing of any non-vaccinated fans. Some vaccinated fans will be allowed near the stage area.

Some of this year’s top prospects and their families are in the process of being invited to Cleveland, where they’ll have their own “living room” space as players are selected. And like last year, players taken in later rounds will participat­e remotely from their homesy.

The league received positive feedback on some elements from last year’s virtual draft — players being shown on camera with their families, coaches and general managers working from home — and it intends to capture some of those intimate moments.

With the lake serving as its backdrop, a large stage will serve as a hub for activities, which will include picks being introduced by some of the NFL’S former and current stars. New on the third day will be teams announcing their own picks remotely.

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Roger Goodell

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