The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)
NFL intends to play 2020 season, but the question remains: How?
The NFL intends to play its 2020 season, and the league will release its full schedule this week, perhaps as early as Wednesday, to reinforce that.
But the contingency plans expected to accompany the announcement only highlight how tenuous the situation is in this coronavirus pandemic, facing so many shifting and unknown variables.
League spokesman Brian McCarthy tweeted Wednesday that kickoff remains slated for Sept. 10 with Super Bowl LV in Tampa on schedule for Feb. 7, 2021, for example. And his confidence is not manufactured: you can’t find anyone prepared to bet against the NFL season happening at the moment.
However, Sports Business Journal reported schedulemakers are building in measures that could allow them to push back the start of the regular season until as late as Oct. 15, and the Super Bowl to Feb. 28, if necessary.
And the Associated Press reported the NFL is discussing playing in empty stadiums or at neutral sites and eliminating bye weeks.
Still, all of those measures are secondary to actually finding a way to kick off the season in the first place. So how will the league even do that?
Well, sources familiar with teams’ thinking have speculated that clubs could end up having to quarantine players and staff beginning at the start of training camp in late July or August. This would mean isolating players and staff from the general public at least.
It could be necessary. But such a measure, like any change in the schedule, would require the sign-off of the NFL Players’ Association. And no decision here would be simple for the players.
Many players would not want to be separated from their families for an extended period of time, if that were asked of them. They’d also be putting their own health at risk by playing in the first place. And some legal experts are skeptical whether the new collective bargaining agreement gives them recourse in the event they contract the virus and they believe a club is liable.
Still, on the other hand, if the league doesn’t play the 2020 season, there is a lot of money at stake for everyone to lose, the players and their families included. And so, hypothetically, if quarantined training camps became the NFL’s answer to prioritizing players’ health and employment, it would seem a reasonable sacrifice to make.