Toronto Star

NFL back for uncertain fall

Teams’ high hopes could easily be derailed by pandemic,

- TIM DAHLBERG

Tom Brady didn’t need to throw another pass to be considered the greatest ever, even as he took the field at the age of 44 Thursday night to win on yet another last-second drive in the opener for the defending champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

That Brady is still slinging passes — and winning championsh­ips — is as remarkable as it is marvellous. His mere presence in Tampa Bay made the Bucs legitimate contenders last year, and the rest of the team happily jumped on his back on a Super Bowl run that solidified his legacy and put an end to the question of whether quarterbac­k or his coach was responsibl­e for all the titles in New England.

If there’s anything the now-traditiona­l Thursday opener showed us, it’s that the NFL is still very much a quarterbac­kdriven league. Brady did what was needed to overcome a spirited Dallas team, though Cowboys fans had to feel pretty good themselves after Dak Prescott threw the ball 58 times — completing 42 of them — to give Dallas the lead before the inevitable happened with the ball back in Brady’s hands.

As the new NFL season unfolds, there are intriguing quarterbac­k stories around the league, including in Los Angeles where the Rams sent the quarterbac­k who was supposed to lead them for the next decade to Detroit in exchange for a passer who toiled for the Lions for a dozen years without winning even one playoff game.

There’s also a crop of rookie QBs who won’t have to wait long to make their mark. Trevor Lawrence is starting in Jacksonvil­le, where Urban Meyer is charged with revitalizi­ng the Jaguars, while Zach Wilson takes his turn as the latest hopeful to lead the New York Jets back to the promised land.

Mac Jones took Cam Newton’s job in New England, while Bears fans think so much of Justin Fields that his jersey was the fourth-best seller in the league before he played an official down. In San Francisco, there’s growing confidence that once Trey Lance takes the field he won’t be coming off it.

And then there are the quarterbac­ks who, largely because of their own choices, will be the biggest wild cards for their teams. They’re the quarterbac­ks who for reasons difficult to comprehend haven’t gotten the COVID-19 shots that nearly all of their teammates had even before arriving in training camp.

That means the Indianapol­is Colts will have to worry weekto-week about whether Carson Wentz goes on the COVID-19 list. It means the Minnesota Vikings don’t know whether Kirk Cousins can make it through the season unscathed after missing several practices because of exposure to someone who tested positive.

It means fans at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas — who need to show proof of vaccinatio­n to attend Raiders games — might look down and see Lamar Jackson under centre for Baltimore on Monday night and wonder why he didn’t have to show his vaccine card, too.

They’re the outliers in a league that as of last week was 93 per cent vaccinated. They’re the ones who will be tested daily for the virus and enter five-day quarantine­s if they have close contact with someone who is positive.

By now, the NFL surely hoped that COVID-19 would not be the defining issue of the season. By now, we all hoped to be past the pandemic that never seems to end.

But the bottom line is the NFL will get the season in and get it in on time. That was proved last year when the league managed to do what looked impossible, even without the luxury of available vaccines.

That means there will be a Super Bowl in February in Los Angeles. It means we’ll have football through the holidays, and millions of Americans will be able to take advantage of the expansion of legalized sports betting to wager a few dollars on their favourite teams. Right now the best bets may be on the teams where everyone — especially the starting quarterbac­k — is fully vaccinated.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada