The Commercial Appeal

How NFL got through pandemic

- Barry Wilner

Saying the NFL is America’s most popular sport isn’t exactly brainiac territory. Arguing that it also dealt most successful­ly with the dangers and restrictio­ns caused by COVID-19 should be just as obvious.

So as training camps open – on time – in preparatio­n for the 2021 season, here’s a look at how the league navigated through a pandemic to play an entire schedule and the Super Bowl in 2020:

March 2020: After having completed the combine in Indianapol­is – business as usual – the NFL, like much of the rest of the country, went into remote mode. But not before the league and players completed an 11-year extension of the labor agreement that would serve both sides well for the rest of 2020 and beyond.

Free agency began minus in-person visits and medical checks as team facilities were shuttered. That didn’t make a difference for Tom Brady, who left New England behind and took his six Super Bowl rings to Tampa Bay. Team owners opted to expand the playoffs by two teams to 14, adding more TV content (read: $$$$) for the postseason.

April 2020: The league’s biggest offseason showcase, the draft, was a massive hit in Nashville the previous spring. It had been scheduled for Las Vegas but COVID-19 forced the NFL to reschedule Sin City for 2022 and go with a totally virtual draft.

And it was a hit, with Commission­er Roger Goodell overseeing matters from his man cave in suburban New York. The commish, who also drew no salary in ‘20 as NFL employees took cuts, even received praise for his performanc­e. How rare is that? There were no pro days for the prospects as teams relied on game film and combine results. The NFL and the players union also agreed to conduct virtual offseason workout programs until every team was permitted to open its facilities.

May 2020: All five internatio­nal games were moved back to home team stadiums as the coronaviru­s surged, and the league released a full regular-season schedule. While planning to play that schedule, the NFL formulated a ticket refund plan for canceled games or those held without fans. (A majority of games would be held in empty stadiums, and several would be moved to different dates, but no cancellati­ons would occur.)

June/july 2020: The Hall of Fame game in Canton, Ohio, which traditiona­lly begins the preseason, was canceled.

Browns center JC Tretter, president of the NFLPA, wrote an open letter telling players they have to fight for “necessary COVID-19 protection­s” as the union supports the cancellati­on of the entire preseason schedule. At first the league cuts the exhibition games in half, then calls them all off.

Training camps, all held at team complexes, opened on time in late July with players tested daily for the coronaviru­s. Players who decided to opt out of the season were offered a stipend by the owners. Dozens will skip the 2020 campaign, as will five game officials.

August 2020: The NFL extended daily coronaviru­s testing for players and staff even though the positive test rate from the first two weeks of camp was less than 1%.

The Dolphins were the first franchise to announce they plan to open the gates to fans during the season.

September 2020: The season kicked off in Kansas City before a socially distanced crowd of about 17,000 and the Chiefs beat Houston.

New stadiums in Los Angeles and Las Vegas opened minus fans.

Daily testing of players except on game day continued into the season. Coaches Vic Fangio of Denver, Pete Carroll of Seattle, Jon Gruden of Las Vegas, Sean Payton of New Orleans and Kyle Shanahan of San Francisco were fined $100,000 each and their teams $250,000 each when they improperly wore masks on the sideline.

Late in September, the Titans had the league’s first COVID-19 outbreak and their game with the Steelers is moved to later in the schedule.

October 2020: More shuffling of the schedule occurred involving nine teams over a period of weeks as several teams had coronaviru­s outbreaks. Updated protocols included PCR testing on game days; use of masks in walkthroug­hs; only play callers permitted to wear face shields in lieu of masks or gaiters on the sideline. The NFL recommende­d that players on the sidelines not participat­ing in a game or about to go on the field wear protective masks.

The Pro Bowl, scheduled for Jan. 31 in Las Vegas, was canceled.

November 2020: An outbreak for the Ravens forced the Thanksgivi­ng night game against archrival Pittsburgh to be pushed back six days. All of Denver’s quarterbac­ks were barred by the league from playing against New Orleans for violating league protocols. The Broncos lost with rookie receiver Kendall Hinton, a former quarterbac­k at Wake Forest, playing the position.

Gruden and the Raiders were fined a total of $650,000 and docked a sixthround draft pick for repeated violations of the NFL’S COVID-19 protocols.

December 2020: The 49ers moved two home games to Arizona after new coronaviru­s regulation­s put in place by officials in Northern California forced the team to find a temporary home.

All teams were ordered by the league to close their facilities for two days after games, with some exceptions. Only players needing medical attention for injuries or in rehab programs were allowed to enter the team complex. Coaches were permitted access, but needed to work in their offices, with all meetings conducted virtually.

The Ravens were fined $250,000 by the NFL for COVID-19 protocols violations.

January/february 2021: Having played games on all seven days of the week, the NFL concluded the regular season with no cancellati­ons and nearly every team hosting all of its home games in its stadiums.

While Cleveland’s Kevin Stefanski, the NFL Coach of the Year, missed his team’s playoff opener against Pittsburgh, the playoffs were conducted on schedule. The NFL spent more than $75 million on testing alone.

The league also gave thousands of Super Bowl tickets to health workers and they saw Tampa Bay not only host the game, but play in it and, with Brady at the helm, finish off the pandemic-impacted season with a victory over Kansas City.

 ?? MATTHEW EMMONS/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady holds the Vince Lombardi Trophy after defeating the Chiefs in Super Bowl LV on Feb. 7.
MATTHEW EMMONS/USA TODAY SPORTS Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady holds the Vince Lombardi Trophy after defeating the Chiefs in Super Bowl LV on Feb. 7.

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