The Maui News - Weekender

NFL Players Associatio­n wants players tested daily for virus when camps open

- By ROB MAADDI

The NFL Players Associatio­n wants players tested daily for coronaviru­s, one of the outstandin­g points in discussion­s with the NFL over health and safety protocols as the start of training camp draws near.

“We believe daily testing is important, especially given some of these hot spots,” NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith said Friday, referring to states with increasing numbers of coronaviru­s cases. “We don’t right now plan on changing that position.”

The league and the union already finalized protocols regarding team travel, media, and treatment response, and updated the facilities protocol to specifical­ly address training camp based on recommenda­tions from a joint committee of doctors, trainers and strength coaches formed by the league and players’ union. The committee recommende­d testing every other day.

NFLPA president JC Tretter, a center for the Cleveland Browns, called an “emergency” meeting Thursday night with head team doctors from clubs in hot spot cities to discuss whether it’s safe to start camp. Rookies for Houston and Kansas City are set to report on Monday. Players from all teams report by July 28.

“They gave their medical opinion it was safe to open training camp, and that’s where we are,” Smith said.

If the league and union fail to reach an agreement, the NFL can implement its proposed rules, according to the CBA. The NFLPA could file a grievance to argue the league isn’t providing a safe work environmen­t under rules of the collective bargaining agreement.

“The league is management,” Smith said. “They have the exclusive right, just like somebody who owns a plant, regarding when it opens and when it closes. They want training camps to open on time. The role of the union is to hold them accountabl­e about whether it’s safe to open now. … We are all trying to get to the right decision more so than getting to the fast decision.”

An acclimatio­n period for players is another main sticking point. The union wants 45 days per the joint committee’s recommenda­tion. The breakdown would be 21 days strength and conditioni­ng, 10 days of non-padded practices, then 14 days of contact to get ready for games. Also, the union doesn’t want to play any preseason games while the NFL had planned to cut the exhibition schedule from four games to two.

“To engage in two games where players would be flying all over the country and then engaging with each other to work, and to do that

prior to the season, doesn’t increase the likelihood of starting and finishing the season on time,” Smith said.

The league previously requested that players report to camp earlier than July 28 to give them more acclimatio­n time for strength and conditioni­ng because they held no formal workouts or team minicamps. But the union declined.

The NFL held a videoconfe­rence call with team owners Friday to discuss preparatio­ns for the season.

“We will continue to implement the health and safety protocols developed jointly with the NFLPA, and based on the advice of leading medical experts, including review by the CDC,” the league said in a statement. “We will address additional issues in a cooperativ­e way. All decisions will be made in an effort to put us in position to play a full regular season and postseason culminatin­g with the Super Bowl which is the shared goal of the clubs and the players.”

Another unanswered question is how many positive tests for coronaviru­s would force a team to shut down.

“If a center tests positive on a Friday and there’s a quarantine period for all of his close contacts, aren’t we talking about 35 players in close contact with me so how does that affect a game?” Tretter said. “Maybe the schedule of how the week looks needs to be different to monitor the type of close contacts you have and avoiding the situations where one positive test on a wrong day late in the week derails an entire team.”

Some teams began sending their Infectious Disease Emergency Response to the NFLPA on Thursday night. The union is reviewing those plans to make sure they’re in compliance with protocols already negotiated.

“This isn’t a normal year so we’ve always done it this way is not going to work this year,” Tretter said. “The idea that this is just going to go away with the snap of a finger and you don’t have to change, it’s wrong. …

“Everything needs to be revamped and refitted to fit coronaviru­s because the expectatio­n that you’re going to be able to fit coronaviru­s into football is not the right expectatio­n.”

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