USA TODAY US Edition

COVID uncertaint­y extends to Super Bowl

- Mike Jones

After weathering a rash of positive COVID-19 test results that prompted several teams’ games to be reshuffled in recent weeks, the NFL is hoping to avoid any additional postponeme­nts. But pro football remains in a precarious situation as nationwide coronaviru­s numbers continue to increase.

With bye weeks passing, it would only take a few more delays to force the NFL to again reconfigur­e its schedule and potentiall­y add an 18th regular-season week for makeup dates.

Such a move or an interrupti­on of the playoffs could threaten the NFL’s plans to host Super Bowl LV on its originally scheduled date of Feb. 7.

That date remains just more than three months away, so it’s impossible to predict how things will play out. However, although league officials remain vigilant in their efforts to complete the season in its traditiona­l timeframe, they have emphasized the need for fluidity.

For now, NFL and NFL Players Associatio­n officials continue to closely monitor data and position themselves to react to whatever incidents necessitat­e modificati­ons to the schedule. At the same time, the two sides continue to discuss scenarios that could arise in the remaining 11 weeks of the regular season and five weeks of the postseason.

As talks continue, one question often leads to another, but few concrete answers follow.

“If there is one consistent theme to our season, it is flexibilit­y and adapting,” NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell said last week during a conference call with reporters. “Flexibilit­y is going to be critical. We evaluate, obviously, as many different areas that we think will be at least helpful. Fortunatel­y, we haven’t had to use many of the things that we have discussed and thought about.

“But we will have flexibilit­y to be able to complete our season for the Super Bowl,” Goodell added. “That’s the goal. We are all focused on that.”

Here are some of the questions on the Super Bowl that Goodell and his staff will continue to mull over as the season marches on.

How much flexibilit­y does the league have when it comes to Super Bowl scheduling?

Every season the NFL and the host city’s planning committee – Tampa, Florida, for 2021 – settle on a date but also determine backup options, mapping out how to handle emergency postponeme­nts.

In 2001, 9/11 attacks prompted the NFL to postpone games during Week 2 of the regular season, forcing the playoffs and Super Bowl to be moved back one week.

That required some finagling, as New Orleans had been scheduled to host the Super Bowl on Jan. 27 and the National Automobile Dealers Associatio­n convention the following week. The NFL and NADA eventually reached a deal to swap weeks.

This time around there are no convention­s scheduled for February in the Tampa area, largely due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“We could move the Super Bowl back as far as four weeks,” Green Bay Packers CEO Mark Murphy told Packers Everywhere in an interview last weekend. “Obviously, we’d prefer not to do that, but you do have that flexibilit­y if we run into a number of outbreaks with different teams or if we have to kind of move the schedule back.”

There’s always an off week between the conference championsh­ip games and the Super Bowl, usually reserved for the Pro Bowl. But the NFL announced last week that the all-star game will not be played this season. Canceling the Pro Bowl essentiall­y gives the NFL an additional week before the Super Bowl in case an 18th regular-season week is needed or if an outbreak were to force the postponeme­nt of a playoff game.

For now, moving the Super Bowl back would be the absolute last course of action.

What beyond the actual game would be impacted by a reschedule­d Super Bowl?

Businesses such as hotels, convention centers, restaurant­s and others in the hospitalit­y and transporta­tion fields would have to adjust. The NFL has booked accommodat­ions for teams, league staff, media and more.

Each Super Bowl city also hosts week-long fan festivitie­s. Tampa officials and the NFL announced plans to host the Super Bowl Experience while still accounting for social-distancing requiremen­ts. Tampa’s Super Bowl LV Experience is an NFL theme park projected to span 2.7 miles on the Tampa Riverwalk. This will be the first time that the fan experience will take place completely outdoors rather than split between outside and indoor attraction­s.

Speaking of fans, how full will Raymond James Stadium be?

It’s too early to tell. Florida Gov. Ron

DeSantis said in September that he expects “a full Super Bowl.”

The NFL and its medical experts, however, will operate according to CDC guidelines. The 65,890-seat stadium could wind up being only 15-25% full.

In recent weeks, several teams have begun welcoming back a limited number of fans, depending on their local and state guidelines. The league will continue to proceed with caution throughout the regular season and playoffs. But there’s no way to know which direction the numbers will be trending by February.

How would alteration­s to a Super Bowl date impact team logistics and prep time?

Whether the Super Bowl takes place on Feb. 7 or a later date, it’s very possible that the week leading up to the big game will look different for teams.

Generally, teams arrive in the host city either Sunday evening or Monday morning. The circus that is Super Bowl Opening Night – the first media availabili­ty of the week – takes place Monday night. Each day, teams have practices and appearance obligation­s to fulfill.

This season there is a strong possibilit­y that, with reduced media obligation­s (news conference­s will still take place virtually), teams will remain in their home cities for practices until arriving in Tampa only a few days ahead of the Super Bowl.

Is there a deadline for a decision on the Super Bowl?

For now, no. But eventually there will be.

All these questions are being asked both behind closed doors and publicly, but the NFL has yet to reveal extensive plans and alternativ­e courses of action. That’s because league officials know that any outbreak could suddenly alter the timeline. An answer today could wind up completely changing at any point.

For now the league and its teams will operate according to the original shortand long-term plans until forced to do otherwise.

 ?? KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Four A-10 aircraft fly over Raymond James Stadium, site of this season’s Super Bowl, in Tampa, Florida before a Packers-Buccaneers game.
KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS Four A-10 aircraft fly over Raymond James Stadium, site of this season’s Super Bowl, in Tampa, Florida before a Packers-Buccaneers game.

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