The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

In sports world, COVID makes a comeback

- Paul Newberry AP Sports Columnist Paul Newberry is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Contact him at pnewberry@ap.org or follow him on Twitter @pnewberry1­963

When you saw the packed stadiums and arenas, when you knew that nearly all athletes had been vaccinated, when there was little mention of positive tests or quarantine­s, it was so easy to believe the worst was over.

Sports, it seemed, had survived the COVID-19 pandemic. Not so fast. By taking their eye off the ball (or puck), profession­al and college sports left themselves susceptibl­e to just the sort of chaos we’ve seen in recent days.

Games postponed. Practices canceled. Scores of players in isolation after testing positive or being around someone who did. The Browns facing the possibilit­y of starting a quarterbac­k they just signed off the practice squad.

The virus has made a rousing comeback. On Friday, the NFL hastily pushed back three weekend games, including the one involving the Browns, to Monday and Tuesday. The NHL shut down two more teams, and the hard-hit Calgary Flames will remain on pause through the holiday break.

Even when games are played, they are often marred by those who aren’t there.

In a rather ludicrous spectacle that passed for an NHL game, the Nashville Predators defeated the Colorado Avalanche 5-2 Thursday night with both rosters ravaged by COVID-19.

Colorado was losing players right up to the opening faceoff and took the ice with just 16 skaters — two fewer than normal. The Avs also dressed an emergency backup goalie.

Nashville had seven players sidelined by the virus protocols, not to mention its entire coaching staff. The Predators had to call up players from their minor-league affiliate in Milwaukee to fill in the gaps.

Less than 24 hours later, all games for the Avalanche and Florida Panthers were postponed at least through the Christmas weekend.

The NBA is dealing with the same sort of issues, along with several college hoops teams. A men’s game was hastily thrown together Saturday in Las Vegas between No. 21 Kentucky and North Carolina after their original opponents pulled out because of COVID-19.

This comes on the heels of soaring infections in Europe, which has led the English Premier League to call off soccer matches and the German government to temporaril­y restricted Bundesliga arenas to 50% capacity or 15,000 fans.

What’s next? Much of that depends of how effectivel­y the pro leagues and college conference­s are able to mitigate the spread of the virus in the next few weeks, a difficult task further hampered by the rise of the highly contagious omicron variant.

The NFL announced Thursday a return to many of the stricter guidelines that were in place a year ago. The NBA and its players also agreed to enhanced health and safety protocols through the holiday season.

The one thing that’s not going to happen is a widespread shutdown of sports, like we saw at the beginning of the pandemic.

Sports lost billions of dollars in 2020. The owners are not about to let that happen again.

They’ll likely get no objection to carrying on largely with business as usual from all those Americans who’ve decided that the best way to beat the virus is to simply ignore it.

Not surprising­ly, that’s been about as effective as a child covering his or her eyes to make something bad go away.

At least 800,000 Americans have died from COVID-19 in less than two years, according to John Hopkins University. Stunningly, far more people have died in 2021 than the previous year, even though highly effective vaccines are now widely available.

Many athletes who’ve tested positive show no signs of being ill, leading some to wonder if they should be forced to sit out when they feel perfectly normal.

Experts acknowledg­e there’s little need to shut down for a few weeks or go to the sort of “bubble” system that allowed leagues to complete their 2020 seasons.

Here are some recommenda­tions:

• Mandated vaccines. The players unions in every sport should sign off on requiring their members to take the jab. Every athlete should be vaccinated — or they can’t play.

• Same for the fans. Pro leagues and colleges conference­s should require proof of vaccinatio­n or at least a recent negative test to get into every arena.

• Stricter protocols. They never should’ve gone away.

• Daily testing, and then some. Hopefully, at some point, we’ll get to a stage in this horrible pandemic where most people are immunized and effective treatments are widely available.

Maybe there will come a time when COVID-19 is viewed as roughly the equivalent of the common cold.

But, as sports has discovered in recent days, we’re not there yet. Not even close.

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