Orlando Sentinel

Ready or not: NFL unveils full schedule for ’20

- By Barry Wilner

The Chiefs will open defense of their Super Bowl championsh­ip by hosting the Texans on Sept. 10 in the NFL’s annual kickoff game — pending developmen­ts in the coronaviru­s pandemic, of course.

The Texans won a regular-season game at Arrowhead Stadium in 2019, then blew a 24-0 lead in the divisional round of the playoffs.

Another highlight of the opening weekend will have Tom Brady’s regular-season debut with the Buccaneers against Drew Brees and the Saints in New Orleans on Sept. 13 — the first matchup of 40-plus quarterbac­ks in NFL history.

The opening of SoFi Stadium in the Los Angeles area that Sunday night has the Rams hosting the Cowboys.

Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas will debut on the Monday night, Sept. 21, with the Raiders facing the Saints.

All of the 32 teams released their schedules early Thursday evening, with the full 2020 list scheduled to be revealed by the league a bit later.

The Chiefs, who won their first Super Bowl in a half-century last February, need baseball’s Royals to move their game for Sept. 10, which now is part of a doublehead­er two days earlier. The teams’ stadiums share parking lots.

The NFL schedule, not to mention offseason activities and the preseason, has to be considered tentative given the current prohibitio­n on large gatherings.

But Commission­er Roger Goodell has said the league is planning for a normal season, albeit while making contingenc­y plans.

“The league and the clubs have been in contact with the relevant local, state and federal government authoritie­s and will continue to do so,” NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said.

The traditiona­l Monday night doublehead­er on opening weekend will have the Steelers at the Giants, which has a rookie head coach in Joe Judge, and the Titans at the Broncos.

“The number one positive is we’re getting ready to play football, so that’s the biggest thing,” Judge said. “Once you get the schedule, it starts moving a little bit faster in your mind in terms of preparing for what’s in front of you.”

Top overall draft pick Joe Burrow and the Bengals start off against the sixth overall selection in April’s draft, Justin Herbert and the Chargers in Cincinnati. The Bengals also will face the other highly rated rookie quarterbac­k Tua Tagavailoa and the Dolphins in Week 13.

The Patriots, without Brady at QB for an opener for only the second time since 2001 — he was suspended for the first four games of 2016 — host the Dolphins on the opening Sunday.

Thanksgivi­ng games will have the Texans at the Lions, Redskins at the Cowboys, then one of the league’s fiercest rivalries with the Ravens at the Steelers in the night game.

Late-season Saturday games will be scheduled but with undetermin­ed matchups for flexibilit­y, something the NFL has done previously.

Certain to draw heavy early season interest will be the past two league MVPs, Patrick Mahomes and Lamar Jackson, facing off in Week 3 on Monday night in Kansas City. The Chiefs and Ravens each have five prime-time games, as do the Patriots, Cowboys, Packers, Buccaneers, defending NFC champ 49ers, and the Rams.

The Lions and Redskins have no prime-time outings.

There’s one Friday night contest, on Christmas, when the Vikings visit the Saints.

Every team has two home and two away games in the first month of the schedule. Whether that’s a quirk or by design is unknown.

The season ends Jan. 3 with all divisional matchups, as in recent years. Then follow the playoffs, with the Super Bowl slated for Feb. 7 in Tampa, Florida.

Pending developmen­ts with the coronaviru­s, of course.

 ?? ETHAN MILLER/GETTY ?? The Raiders will open Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Monday, Sept. 21 vs. the Saints.
ETHAN MILLER/GETTY The Raiders will open Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Monday, Sept. 21 vs. the Saints.

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