The Denver Post

Facetime: Coaches have learned lessons on face masks

- By Arnie Stapleton

After the Las Vegas Raiders handed the Kansas City Chiefs their first loss in 337 days, Jon Gruden sat down for the postgame videoconfe­rence looking like a Wild West outlaw.

“Can I take this off?” he politely asked his public relations man before slipping off his black bandana face mask.

Gruden wore the face covering properly in all but three of the 50 times he was shown on the CBS broadcast Sunday, and during two of those transgress­ions he quickly pulled it back over his nose.

That was a 180- degree switch for Gruden, one of five NFL head coaches fined $ 100,000 last month for failing to abide by the league’s mask rules.

Last week against the Bills, Gruden was shown more times ( 20) violating the NFL’s coronaviru­s safety rules requiring noses and mouths to be covered than he was shown in compliance ( 19) with the COVID- 19 mitigation measures.

The other coaches who were dinged -- and their teams docked $ 250,000 -- for shoddy mask also learned their expensive lessons.

They all started complying in Week 3, when Broncos coach Vic Fangio began donning a face shield like Andy Reid. Saints coach Sean Payton was wearing his mask properly 32 of 35 times he was shown on the telecast last week against the Lions, and 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan was 100% in compliance during the 35 times he was shown against Philadelph­ia.

And Seahawks coach Pete Carroll had his mask on last week against Miami for all but a handful of sideline shots. He, too, pulled it back over his nose most of those times he was shown in violation.

This is a good thing not only for their pocketbook­s and reputation­s but for the league as a whole because the Tennessee Titans’ COVID- 19 mess began with an assistant coach testing positive for the virus last month.

It shows the coaches and players are all in this together.

Broncos linebacker Von Miller, who last spring became the biggest sports star to announce he’d contracted the coronaviru­s, said he’s not surprised the league’s mask mandate got off to a rocky start.

“It’s just humanity, it’s not one person’s fault,” said Miller, who aims to return from an ankle injury in December. “It’s hard to get everybody on the same page. You see people not even playing sports, you ask them to wear a mask and they go all crazy. They say, ‘ They’re taking away my freedom.’

“When it comes over to football, it takes time to get everybody aware. Everybody’s experience is different with COVID- 19. I’ve had the virus. I know how serious it is,” Miller said. “I keep my mask on. I walk around and try to keep everybody safe.

“You have somebody that doesn’t have anybody affected by the virus, it doesn’t hit the same with them. It takes time and an awareness to get everybody on the same page,” Miller added. “I don’t blame the coaches for not wearing masks. It just takes a little bit of time to get everybody on the same page.”

That, and some hefty fines.

 ?? Reed Hoffmann, The Associated Press ?? Las Vegas Raiders quarterbac­k Derek Carr talks to Las Vegas coach Jon Gruden during Sunday’s l game against the Kansas City Chiefs.
Reed Hoffmann, The Associated Press Las Vegas Raiders quarterbac­k Derek Carr talks to Las Vegas coach Jon Gruden during Sunday’s l game against the Kansas City Chiefs.

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