Marysville Appeal-Democrat

COVID protocols are the biggest wildcard in postseason

- By Paul Zeise Pittsburgh Post-gazette columnist (TNS)

lifetime and I’m 50 years old — That is a significan­t change “By the grace of God that wasn’t us.”canneverre­callanynon-footballfo­rthebrowns,asittakest­heir factor that weighs so heavily head coach and maybe their best Mike Tomlin addressed this on the outcome of the games. offensive lineman out of the mix at his weekly news conference We have never seen anything for the most important game Tuesday. He said that this is that could change the fortunes the franchise has played in more something that every coach is of a team as quickly as these than a decade. And there is no thinking about as they prepare COVID-19 protocols have. guarantee the outbreak is over for games each week, but it

We got another reminder of and there won’t be more players is also something they can’t this with the Browns announcing or even more significan­t players control. that their head coach, Kevan that are ruled out for the game. “Every morning at 6 a.m., I Stefanski, and guard Joel Bitonio It is a reality check for every am looking at my phone and and receiver Khadarel Hodge NFL team still alive in the waiting for verificati­on of the tested positive for COVID-19 playoffs that their fortunes may previous days test results,” and will not be available for the not be 100% in their hands. I’m Tomlin said. “Are we in the Steelers-browns playoff game quite sure every NFL coach of a clear or not, and what necessary Sunday. playoff team said this morning, adjustment­s need to be made or

It would be ideal if the winner of the Super Bowl was actually the best team in the NFL.

That happens sometimes, but often there are other factors — injuries, the right path of opponents, a couple of key calls — that help determine the winner.

COVID-19 protocols trump all of those factors and could be the single biggest factor in the fate of teams fighting for the Super Bowl. We — at least in my what investigat­ions need to be made? That has been our life, not just here in Pittsburgh, but collective­ly as members of the National Football League since July.

“There are continual reminders of how fragile these circumstan­ces are so what is transpirin­g in Cleveland is not reinforcem­ent or verificati­on it is just more of the same for us like it has been for everyone else throughout the course of this journey.”

The Browns weren’t likely to win this week, anyway. The Steelers have owned them, Ben Roethlisbe­rger never loses to them and earlier this year, when both teams were at full strength, the Steelers pounded them into the Heinz Field turf. And even if the Browns somehow beat their demons and get past the Steelers, they aren’t going anywhere.

Nobody believed the Browns were a Super

Bowl team before this developmen­t and so when they ultimately end up losing Sunday, it will be a blip on the radar, a tiny footnote in history, that they didn’t have their coach.

However, there are many other teams with Super Bowl aspiration­s that could certainly get taken out of the playoffs with a bad batch of COVID-19 tests. And that would be a nightmare for the NFL as they have forged through a lot of uncertaint­y and adversity to get to the point where they can put on the playoffs and showcase the best of the league.

The Browns losing Stefanski is one thing — what if, say, the Packers wake up one day and find out Aaron Rodgers has tested positive or has had close contact with someone who is positive? What about the Chiefs and Patrick Mahomes, the Bills and Josh Allen or the Saints and Drew Brees — and, of course, the Steelers and Roethlisbe­rger?

Those developmen­ts would absolutely change the course of the playoffs and make it very difficult for the NFL to crown a champion without some degree of an asterisk. We have seen injuries change the course of the playoffs in the past, but I am not sure we have seen something that has the ability to wipe out a position group or side of the ball like COVID-19.

Heck, maybe the two teams best positioned to handle this stuff are the Ravens and Titans. Both have already had a fairly significan­t outbreak, so maybe the worst is behind them. We aren’t sure how that all works, but it seems like people getting a second infection is fairly rare, so I’m sure Mike Vrabel and John Harbaugh are knocking on wood.

The Steelers cannot control these outbreaks or when they happen. The virus has proven it will pop up whenever and wherever it chooses regardless of how many safeguards are in place.

The Steelers can only hope that they aren’t on the wrong end of a batch of positive tests and that they have the chance to compete in the playoffs with their roster intact.

The NFL playoffs are about to get started and there are plenty of great teams, players and storylines to follow.

Let’s hope all of the games are decided on the field and not in the lab where tests are being processed.

Stefanski

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States