The Columbus Dispatch

Matt Blair, star linebacker for Vikings, dies at 70 MLB players extend streak of no COVID positives to 54 days

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MINNEAPOLI­S — Matt Blair, one of the great linebacker­s in Minnesota Vikings history and a six-time Pro Bowler who played in two Super Bowls, has died. He was 70 years old.

His death was announced by the team. Blair, who had been suffering from dementia, died Thursday after an extended period in hospice care, according to the Star Tribune.

“He’d been suffering for a while, so I guess maybe it’s a blessing in disguise,” former teammate Scott Studwell told the newspaper. “But it’s still too young. It’s a sad day.”

Vikings owner Mark Wilf said in a statement: “Matt Blair was a great presence at Vikings events and a tremendous teammate long after playing. He embodied the best of what it means to be a Viking. Matt is a Ring of Honor player whose legacy will live on forever with the franchise and in the community he loved.”

Drafted in the second round out of Iowa State in 1974, Blair played all 12 of his NFL seasons for the Vikings, from 1974 to 1985. He started 130 of the 160 regular-season games he played, racking up 1,452 tackles, the second most in team history. He finished his career with 16 intercepti­ons, 20 fumble recoveries and 20 blocked punts, extra points and field goals.

In a 2015 interview with the Star Tribune, then-64-year-old Blair began crying, saying a neurologis­t told him and his wife, Mary Beth, that his early signs of dementia were likely the result of chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, or CTE, a degenerati­ve brain disease linked to concussion­s. CTE cannot be diagnosed until after death.

ARLINGTON, Texas — Major League Baseball’s postseason bubble succeeded as a defense against the novel coronaviru­s. MLB players extended their streak of consecutiv­e days with no new COVID-19 tests to 54 through Thursday during a time of rising cases in which of the United States.

Players did not have positive tests in 62 of the previous 63 days, the commission­er’s office said Friday. There were no positive tests among 3,597 samples samples collected in the week.

MLB has collected 172,740 samples overall, of which 91 have been positive, or 0.05%.

Fifty-seven of 91 positives have been players, and 21 of the 30 teams have had a person covered by the monitoring test positive.

The eight teams that reached the Division Series entered bubble environmen­ts and played at neutral sites in the hope of minimizing exposure to the virus. The Los Angeles Dodgers and Tampa Bay Rays will remain in bubble environmen­ts through the end of the World Series.

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