The Columbus Dispatch

Big names landing on NFL coronaviru­s list

- Arnie Stapleton ASSOCIATED PRESS BENNY SIEU/USA TODAY SPORTS

DENVER — Ndamukong Suh, Chris Harris Jr., Aaron Rodgers, Cameron Jordan. Ty Montgomery, Mark Ingram.

No, it’s not a Pro Bowl ballot, just a smattering of the big names that have landed on the NFL’S evermore crowded reserve/covid-19 list this season.

De’vondre Campbell, Davante Adams, Harrison Smith, Amari Cooper, Randy Gregory.

Like any fan setting a fantasy roster, filling out a betting sheet or just cheering on their team, Denver Broncos coach Vic Fangio can’t help but raise an eyebrow or two at the relentless stream of stars popping up on the virus list, landing themselves in quarantine and their teams in a conundrum.

“You notice it, obviously, and you know it can happen to you. It’s not just, ‘Well, that’s their problem,” Fangio said Monday as three dozen players across the league were being added to the reserve/covid-19 list either because they contracted the virus or were close to someone who did.

Chandler Jones, Keenan Allen, T.J. Watt, Minkah Fitzpatric­k, Ben Roethlisbe­rger, Nick Chubb, David Njoku.

Among the 36 fresh additions to the list on Monday were Jalen Ramsey and

Tyler Higbee, who missed the Los Angeles Rams’ 30-23 win at Arizona that tightened the NFC race.

“It could end up being our problem just like last year — if you remember — when we were on the wrong side of New England’s problem,” Fangio said. “We lost our bye and had our game get postponed. I told the team, ‘Hey, it could come our way at some point.’ It did, as you guys know. Yeah, you notice it.”

Last year, the league made the Broncos play a game without a quarterbac­k because all four of theirs were quarantine­d after one of them came down sick with COVID-19 and the rest were deemed close contacts.

NFL owners breathed a huge sigh of relief when they got through the entire 2020 regular and postseason without a cancellati­on – and the league was thankful Tom Brady didn’t get sick until after he’d won his seventh Super Bowl.

Even with vaccinatio­ns available this season, there are more than 100 players who have refused to get jabbed, putting themselves and their teams at risk down the stretch and into the playoffs.

If a vaccinated player gets a breakthrou­gh case of COVID-19, he can return to action as soon as he’s asymptomat­ic and has two negative tests 24 hours apart. Unvaccinat­ed players who get sick have to sit out a minimum of 10 days as Rodgers, the league’s reigning MVP, had to do last month.

The league says the vaccinatio­n rate among players is more than 94.3%, which still leaves about 126 of the 2,208 players on 53-man active rosters and 16man practice squads unvaccinat­ed and therefore subject to stricter protocols such as daily nasal tests and a prohibitio­n from interactin­g with teammates in the locker room or even on their own time away from work.

Last summer, more than two dozen Pro Football Hall of Famers teamed up as part of a community outreach and education program to help build COVID-19 vaccinatio­n confidence in the general public. They also had a message for players who didn’t want to get vaccinated.

“We’re very fortunate to play a sport, a game, and get paid extremely well for it. And here in America the one thing we deem very necessary is our freedom of choice,” said Rod Woodson, class of 2009. “And they do get to exercise that freedom by not getting vaccinated.

“But the one thing I love that the NFL did this year was to say, OK, you’re exercising your freedom not to get it, well we’re going to exercise our freedom as a company. If you cause a game to be canceled, first of all you’re going to forfeit that and then we’re going to fine you. And nobody gets paid on either team on top of that.”

With nearly 19 of every 20 players fully vaccinated, that looks very unlikely to happen over the final month.

Many teams such as Fangio’s are taking all the precaution­s they can as an unpreceden­ted two dozen franchises race toward Christmas with a realistic shot at the playoffs next month.

 ?? ?? Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers, seen passing against the Bears on Sunday, is among big names in the NFL who have missed time due to COVID-19 infections this season.
Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers, seen passing against the Bears on Sunday, is among big names in the NFL who have missed time due to COVID-19 infections this season.

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