The Columbus Dispatch

Will more teams quarantine a QB?

- Tom Schad

It began as nothing more than a hypothetic­al solution to a hypothetic­al problem, kicked around in NFL circles over the summer.

With the league set to return amid a global pandemic, should teams isolate one of their quarterbac­ks from the rest of the position group to protect against potential COVID-19 exposure? A handful of teams, including the Buffalo Bills and Philadelph­ia Eagles, embraced the idea. Others balked at it. Then, last week, that offseason what-if became all too real.

After all four of their quarterbac­ks were ruled out due to COVID-19 protocols, the Denver Broncos were left to start practice-squad wide receiver Kendall Hinton under center Sunday against the New Orleans Saints. He finished with one completion and two intercepti­ons, and the Broncos lost, 31-3.

Veteran agent Mike Mccartney, who publicly touted the notion of a “quarantine quarterbac­k” this summer, said he has heard from several teams that are now revisiting the idea. And the tenor of those conversati­ons has changed.

“Until something like what happened with the Broncos happens – when you’re talking about theory all the time – maybe it’s easy to take a conservati­ve approach,” Mccartney told USA TODAY Sports on Monday. “But after what happened (Sunday), I think there are several teams that are at least going to have strong conversati­ons about it now.”

Two of Mccartney’s clients have served in the “quarantine quarterbac­k” role so far this season.

Veteran Josh Mccown spent a chunk of the season on the Eagles’ practice squad while still living at his home in Texas, working out on his own and attending meetings virtually. Trevor Siemian filled a similar role for the Tennessee Titans after their outbreak. (Mccown and Siemian have since signed with the Houston Texans and New Orleans Saints, respective­ly.)

Meanwhile, in Buffalo, rookie Jake Fromm has been practicing separately from the rest of the team, throwing to a few practice-squad receivers in private sessions after Bills practices. He is also sequestere­d in meetings to ensure that he would not qualify as a “close contact” with the team’s other quarterbac­ks, Bills coach Sean Mcdermott said.

“Jake and our staff have just done a phenomenal job of executing that,” Mcdermott told reporters Monday. “And (the Broncos’ situation) is honestly why we’ve done it. It could happen to anyone.

It could happen to us, or any position for that matter.”

Titans coach Mike Vrabel said Monday that recently signed quarterbac­k Deshone Kizer will be protected in a similar way moving forward. NFL teams typically carry two or three quarterbac­ks on their active rosters, and perhaps one more on the practice squad. The league expanded practice squads to 16 players this season to give teams more flexibility amid COVID-19, which is one of the reasons why people like Mccartney view it as a no-brainer – especially for playoffhopeful teams.

“If there’s five weeks, six weeks left in the season, and you have hopes (of making) the playoffs, why would you take the risk?” he said. “... To me, it’s not that difficult to carve out one spot to make sure you’re protected, and leave that player off-site.”

Head coaches, however, largely remain split on whether to isolate a quarterbac­k – even after Denver’s nightmare scenario came to fruition over the weekend. Indianapol­is Colts coach Frank Reich and Pittsburgh Steelers coach Mike Tomlin are among those who don’t think such steps are needed as long as their players follow the league’s COVID-19 protocols. Broncos starter Drew Lock acknowledg­ed in a statement that he and two other quarterbac­ks “let our masking slip” while attending a meeting last Wednesday with teammate Jeff Driskel, who tested positive the next day. The NFL requires that players who are deemed high-risk close contacts with an infected individual be placed on the Reserve/covid-19 list, in addition to those who test positive themselves.

 ?? RON CHENOY/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Broncos QB Kendall Hinton scrambles against the Saints on Sunday in Denver. Hinton, an undrafted rookie wide receiver, was elevated from the practice squad to play against New Orleans.
RON CHENOY/USA TODAY SPORTS Broncos QB Kendall Hinton scrambles against the Saints on Sunday in Denver. Hinton, an undrafted rookie wide receiver, was elevated from the practice squad to play against New Orleans.

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