The News-Times

Season opens to full stadiums as COVID-19 surges

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TAMPA, Fla. — When Tom Brady runs out from the tunnel, screaming “Let’s Go!” and leading the defending Super Bowl champion Buccaneers onto the field Thursday night against the Dallas Cowboys, a full stadium will greet players for the first time since COVID-19 upended the world and changed the way sports were viewed.

The NFL kicks off its biggest season — teams are playing a 17-game schedule — in front of packed crowds as the league follows the NBA, NHL, MLB, NCAA and others in opening its doors with no capacity limitation­s.

While there were no restrictio­ns in the preseason, stadiums weren’t completely filled as many fans skip exhibition games. That won’t be the case at Raymond James Stadium with more than 65,000 fans expected to see the Buccaneers celebrate their championsh­ip before beginning defense of their crown.

Fans return, however, as COVID-19 surges, with about 150,000 news cases daily. The delta variant is filling hospitals, children are getting sick, and some schools are abruptly switching back to remote learning because of outbreaks. The U.S. death toll stands at more than 650,000, with one major forecast model projecting it will top 750,000 by Dec. 1 — deep into the NFL season.

“We and our clubs are in daily and regular conversati­ons with local and state authoritie­s, but as we sit here right now, we don’t anticipate any reduction in capacity this year,” Peter O’Reilly, NFL executive vice president of club business and events, said in the league’s last briefing. “We really feel good about where we stand, given the vaccinatio­n rates across the country, and feel as though we will be able to move through the season. Obviously, we don’t take anything for granted; we work closely on all of our protocols, working with and under the guidance of those state and local authoritie­s. As we sit here today, all 30 stadiums are able to be at full capacity and that’s how we expect to go through the season in lockstep with those local and state authoritie­s.”

NFL teams can have different stadium policies and protocols. The Seattle Seahawks, Las Vegas Raiders and New Orleans Saints are requiring fans to provide proof of vaccinatio­n to enter. Other teams may join them along the way.

College football’s first full weekend included some stadiums filled to capacity — more fans than will attend most NFL games.

“While people are still getting sick, people aren’t dying at the same rate, according to the statistics. That’s the key,” said Dr. Rand McLain, chief medical officer of LCR Health. “You go back to where it started, hospitals were loading up and an inordinate amount of people were dying. We’re past that now at least at this time, though we have the delta variant and the mu variant beating the vaccines. From there, being outside is a huge plus. You’re not seeing the transmissi­on when there’s a breeze blowing.”

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