The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Players to be tested daily first 2 weeks

- By Rob Maaddi

NFL players will be tested daily for the coronaviru­s for at least the first two weeks of training camp, per the league’s new testing protocols.

The NFL and the players’ union reached an agreement Monday as rookies for Houston and Kansas City were set to report to camp. Rookies for other teams begin arriving July 21.

Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL chief medical officer, said more than one negative test is required before players initially enter the building to begin physical exams or any form of team activity.

After two weeks of daily testing, if the positivity rate of those tests falls below 5% among players and Tier I and Tier II individual­s, as described in previously NFL protocols, testing would go to every other day. If the positivity rate doesn’t fall below that threshold, daily testing would continue until it drops.

“There’s no finish line with health and safety and I think these protocols are very much living and breathing documents, which means they will change as we gain new knowledge about this virus, as we gain new knowledge about transmissi­on, as we gain new knowledge about testing and there are new tests and new techniques that come online,” Sills said. “We very much anticipate that these protocols will change.”

The NFL has sought input from other leagues that have already returned to action, including leagues outside the country.

“These are complicate­d issues which involve a lot of factors,” Sills said. “But suffice it to say we very much look at it from a medical and public health standpoint, and we want to make sure that first and foremost we’re creating the safest possible environmen­t for our players, for our coaches and our staff, but that we’re also operating within the safest environmen­t for each one of our clubs’ locations, which means ongoing and regular communicat­ion with the public health authoritie­s in those areas.”

The league and the NFLPA already finalized protocols regarding team travel, media, and treatment response, and updated the facilities protocol to specifical­ly address training camp based on recommenda­tions from a joint committee of doctors, trainers and strength coaches formed by the league and players’ union.

“Our union has been pushing for the strongest testing, tracing and treatment protocols to keep our players safe. The testing protocols we agreed to are one critical factor that will help us return to work safely, and gives us the best chance to play and finish the season,” the union said in a statement Monday.

Sills stressed the importance of responsibl­e behavior away from team facilities. Unlike the NBA and NHL, the NFL can’t put its clubs in a bubble environmen­t, so players and team personnel will have outside risk.

“What’s good for players and what makes players and their families safer also makes coaches, staff and teams safer and, quite frankly, it makes our communitie­s safer,” Sills said.

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