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2020 NFL SEASON PREVIEW League gets set for year unlike any other

- BARRY WILNER

Never has the NFL doubted it would open its season on time. For months, it has steadfastl­y stuck to its plans, even as the coronaviru­s pandemic has altered the course of every other sport — on all levels.

With its kickoff game of Super Bowl champion Kansas City hosting Houston rapidly approachin­g, possibly with fans in the stands, America’s most popular sport must recognize the challenges off the field could be more daunting than those on it. Particular­ly after 77 recent false positive COVID-19 tests.

“We’re going to have to be flexible and adaptable,” says Dr. Allen Sills, the league’s chief medical officer.

“If this taught us anything, projecting three, four weeks down the road is a hazardous business.”

Many would say playing a collision sport not only is hazardous but foolhardy. The NFL did have 67 players opt out of the season. But it seems the vast majority of players, coaches, executives and, for certain, owners, want to stick to the script. Even with the risk COVID-19 presents.

“I just really thought about all the things that could happen,” says Broncos star linebacker Von Miller, who has recovered from the coronaviru­s. “This season is different from any other season. I weighed the positives and the negatives, and I came to my own decision that I can play. I thought about me having asthma. I went over everything that I possibly could with my agent, and we just thought about it.”

The NFL believes it has thought of everything it can do to provide the safest environmen­t for its games. Still, some clubs are planning to open the gates to fans, with the Dolphins announcing plans for about 13,000 folks in the stands on Sept. 20.

Yes, there are competitiv­e imbalance issues there, but if one municipali­ty allows fans and another doesn’t, is it up to the league to step in?

“It’s very hard,” Vikings coach Mike Zimmer says. “Some stadiums, they’re allowing people in, and it looks like we’re not going to have any fans there early, which really stinks because we have such unbelievab­le fans, and they make that place rocking every Sunday. But the best way to have home-field advantage is to play really good: execute, make tackles, don’t make mistakes, don’t commit penalties, turnovers, all those things.”

Some teams have huge advantages heading into a season like no other, with or without anyone in the seats.

STABILITY

Looking for clubs with a distinct edge when the 16-game (maybe) season kicks off? Try New Orleans, Kansas City, San Francisco, Buffalo, Baltimore and Seattle. Yep, 2019 playoff teams that made few significant changes are in the best shape.

Teams that could struggle mightily after an offseason of constant upheaval are the Giants, Panthers, Browns, Raiders, Jaguars and Lions — all non-playoff clubs a year ago.

ON THE MOVE

No one is traveling more of a distance, at least achievemen­t-wise, than Tom Brady. Maybe Philip Rivers’ journey from Los Angeles to Indianapol­is is longer in miles, and certainly Todd Gurley’s trip from L.A. to Atlanta is. When it comes to meaningful­ness, though, the conversati­on begins and ends with the six-time Super Bowl champ.

At 43, when most players are looking for tee times, not touchdowns, Brady joins the perennial underachie­ving Buccaneers. They last made the playoffs in 2007, a year Brady led New England to an undefeated regular season.

Also working in new places are tight end Rob Gronkowski (Buccaneers); QBs Cam Newton (Patriots), Teddy Bridgewate­r (Panthers) and Nick Foles (Bears) receivers DeAndre Hopkins (Cardinals), Stefon Diggs (Bills) and Emmanuel Sanders (Saints); DLs Calais Campbell (Ravens) and Jurrell Casey (Broncos); and DBs Chris Harris Jr. (Chargers) and Byron Jones (Dolphins).

First-time head coaches Joe Judge with the Giants, Kevin Stefanski (Browns) and Matt Rhule (Panthers) couldn’t be taking over non-playoff teams in a worse situation. It won’t be a walk-through to the postseason for the Dallas Cowboys newcomer with the strong Green Bay resume, Mike McCarthy.

WASHINGTON FOOTBALL

Dan Snyder’s team seemed to be on a good path, hiring a prime-time coach in Ron Rivera, disposing of the nickname with racial overtones, and hiring the first Black team president in the NFL. Unfortunat­ely, Rivera announced he has a form of skin cancer, making his inseason contributi­on to the club uncertain, though he says he wants everything to proceed normally.

SOCIAL AND RACIAL JUSTICE

Colin Kaepernick’s name always will be associated with pro football as the instigator of kneeling and protests during the national anthem against police brutality, social and racial injustice. That began back in 2016, however, and only now has the league fully recognized what Kaepernick was attempting to expose.

Recently, several teams skipped practice sessions in protest of the shooting of Jacob Blake by police in Kenosha. More demonstrat­ions of their togetherne­ss in battling societal ills can be expected.

“We, the National Football League, admit we were wrong for not listening to NFL players earlier and encourage all to speak out and peacefully protest,” Commission­er Roger Goodell said while also embracing the Black Lives Matter movement. Approximat­ely 70 percent of NFL players in 2019 were Black.

Now, how will the “team unity” being espoused by management and coaching staffs play out when the first bars of “The Star-Spangled Banner” are heard at Arrowhead Stadium for the TexansChie­fs opener?

Like nearly everything else in 2020, prognostic­ating that is useless.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? At 43, quarterbac­k Tom Brady has a new challenge with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
ASSOCIATED PRESS At 43, quarterbac­k Tom Brady has a new challenge with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

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