New York Daily News

GIANTS CB BEAL OPTS OUT OF SEASON

NFL, like MLB, has to count on player responsibi­lity for 2020 season to work

- Pages 42-43

The coronaviru­s’ compromise of the Major League Baseball schedule prompted natural questions about whether the NFL could successful­ly complete its season this fall.

Football, like baseball, is not operating in a “bubble” environmen­t like the NBA, NHL, MLS, WNBA and NWSL — leagues that have provided the best blueprint in the United States so far.

It should be noted, however, that the NFL is leaving the door open to tightening its quarantine requiremen­ts should the league’s and union’s doctors determine it’s necessary.

“All options remain on the table,” Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL’s chief medical officer, told ProFootbal­lTalk last weekend. “As we get into the season and we see what the data shows us, we’re gonna remain open to all these different scenarios and seeing what seems to be the most effective.”

And while players and staff are allowed to stay at home with their families if they wish, coaches like the Giants’ Joe Judge are still setting expectatio­ns skyhigh for the behavior and sacrifices they expect from their employees while away from the facility.

Judge is even staying at the Giants’ team hotel himself down the street from MetLife Stadium, temporaril­y separated from his family and setting an example as a first-year head coach.

“To be honest with you, if it’s not completely isolated like the NBA and the NHL are working in, it’s not a bubble,” Judge, 38, said in a Zoom conference call on Wednesday. “I’d say the biggest message I’ve had for everybody, whether it’s my coaches, the support staff, the players, it’s not about being in a bubble this year. That doesn’t exist. It’s about making the right decisions away from the building and making sure we don’t bring something into the building.”

Still, it’s a bit of a surprise, frankly, that the NFL and NFL Players’ Associatio­n didn’t at least agree to require teams’ staffs, players and coaches to quarantine in the same hotel for one month of training camp to limit exposure and create an extra level of virus control.

The NFL players’ union also told agents a couple weeks ago that doctors believed the risk of a ‘super-spreader’ incident was a major reason not to put each NFL team’s entire roster of players in one hotel, where one positive case could quickly expose everyone.

(They view this as different from an NBA Orlando model because teams’ staffs would still be going home to their families, so the entire operation isn’t truly isolated).

But more than anything, especially considerin­g protocols for a full season, both the union and league acknowledg­ed plenty of players with families did not want to separate from their loved ones.

There is also a belief that the size of NFL teams’ support staffs makes a tighter bubble a massive and nearly impossible undertakin­g compared to the bubbled sports, especially since that would disrupt hundreds of families per club, as well.

So as Sills said, football’s plan for the time being therefore “combines the margin of safety with practicali­ty.” And NFL players negotiated the right to opt out of the 2020 season entirely by Thursday at 4 p.m.

So far, around 60 players have opted out. That group includes including two Giants: starting left tackle Nate Solder (as a high-risk opt-out), starting corner Sam Beal and reserve receiver Da’Mari Scott (voluntary opt-outs). Several highprofil­e players have opted out elsewhere, including Patriots edge Dont’a Hightower and Jets linebacker C.J Mosley. Bills stud corner Tre’Davious White said Wednesday he is still undecided.

While Judge is “not mandating” that any coach stays in the hotel and cannot require a player to either, he has stressed the importance of making the necessary sacrifices whether a player opted in to living in the hotel or opted out.

“The ones that are in the hotel have a curfew. We’ve expressed to the ones on the outside that they have to make the right decisions when they’re away from the building in terms of how they structure their nights,” Judge said.

The Giants have had two players on the reserve/COVID-19 list so far: wideout David Sills V and linebacker Josiah Tauaefa. Sills rejoined the team on Tuesday after a week as an asymptomat­ic test. Tauaefa went on the list on Tuesday.

The NFL said Wednesday morning that 90 of approximat­ely 2,600 players on rosters across the league (3.4%) have been placed on the reserve/ COVID-19 list so far, and 25 already have been activated from that group of 90.

Low early numbers, however, do not promise an outbreak isn’t on the horizon, especially in a country that has failed to get the virus under control.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States