Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Empty seating provides some strange sights, game sounds

- By Arnie Stapleton The Associated Press

DENVER » Broncos quarterbac­k Drew Lock felt like he was at the library, whispering in the huddle at empty Empower Field so the Tennessee Titans couldn’t eavesdrop.

All the vacant seats at Gillette Stadium had Patriots star Julian Edelman reminiscin­g about his time in junior college.

Aaron Rodgers capitalize­d on the silenced Gjallarhor­n in Minneapoli­s to repeatedly draw defenders offside with his signature hard count, something that’s next to impossible in the normal din of a packed US Bank Stadium, which was unoccupied last weekend. The coronaviru­s pandemic that

has altered the sports landscape from youth leagues to the pros resulted in just two teams permitting spectators on the NFL’s opening weekend.

The Super Bowl champion Chiefs allowed 16,940 fans into 77,000-seat Arrowhead Stadium for their season kickoff against Houston, and the Jaguars allowed 16,800 fans for their game against the Colts on Sunday, although only 14,100 fans showed up.

The 16 teams who opened on the road have their home openers in Week 2 that began with the Browns allowing 6,000 fans into FirstEnerg­y Stadium for their game against the Bengals on Thursday night.

Three more teams are letting fans in this weekend: the Colts (2,500), Dolphins (13,000) and Cowboys, who are expecting to allow a league-high 20,000 fans into 80,000seat AT&T Stadium in Arlington for their game against the Falcons.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is allowing 50% capacity at sporting events but Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy indicated Wednesday that the crowd will be about half of that.

The Broncos actually allowed 500 spectators Monday night, guests of players and coaches who sat separated in the lower bowl as a sort of test run for Week 3 when 5,700 fans get to

watch Tom Brady and the Buccaneers.

Lock and his teammates sorely missed the usual crowd buzz when they were futilely trying to fend off a last-minute comeback by the Titans, who won it on a field goal in the waning seconds.

“Yeah, that would have been sweet,” Lock said. “It was really weird out there. No noise, the timeouts, it was quiet. I wanted to call the play quietly in the huddle because I didn’t know if they could hear us calling plays. It was weird.”

McCarthy isn’t sure having the largest crowd on hand over the first two weeks of the season will matter when the Cowboys host the Falcons.

“We’ll find out,” he said. “I think the word different, unusual, however you want to describe it.”

McCarthy was taken aback by the atmosphere last weekend when the Cowboys helped christen the new $5 billion SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles with a thriller against the Rams.

“It was an experience I don’t think any of us ever expected,” McCarthy said. “I knew it was going to be empty. I just didn’t think it was going to be that quiet. I thought there would be a little more background noise, maybe a little more music during TV timeouts.”

Fans watching from afar had two advantages, including artificial crowd noise culled from previous games by NFL Films that was different than the noise piped in the stadium.

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