The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

NFL plans to remove restrictio­ns for vaccinated personnel

- By Barry Wilner

The NFL has plans to eliminate some restrictio­ns from its current COVID-19 protocols for vaccinated players, coaches and personnel.

In a memo sent to the 32 teams Wednesday and obtained by The Associated Press, the league detailed potential amendments to the protocols used throughout the 2020 season and current offseason. Among the elements that could be eliminated are the need to participat­e in daily testing; quarantine periods due to close contact with an infected individual; and/or refraining from social gatherings among other vaccinated individual­s.

“It is also anticipate­d that clubs that achieve a certain rate of vaccinatio­n among its tiered staff and players may be permitted to relax restrictio­ns that apply to meetings, meal time and use of locker rooms,” the memo said.

On Tuesday, after the first of two days of virtual meetings among the team owners, Commission­er Roger Goodell noted the value of pursuing coronaviru­s vaccines.

“We will be encouragin­g all personnel to get vaccinated and working with the players associatio­n on all these issues,” Goodell said. “We are also using our platforms publicly to talk about the importance of getting vaccinatio­ns.”

Goodell also mentioned the hope that the 2021 season will be fully attended by fans. That would be subject to local COVID-19 rules and protocols.

“We’re discussing plans to welcome back all fans across the country at all stadiums,” he said. “All of us want to see every one of our fans back. Football is not the same without fans, and we expect to have full stadiums in the upcoming season.”

The league has given the teams permission to begin offseason programs on April 19. Most of those are voluntary, with the exception of mandatory minicamp in June.

However, NFL Players Associatio­n President JC Tretter argued again on Wednesday that the coronaviru­s-caused eliminatio­n of such things as organized team activities (OTAS) and minicamps did more good than harm in 2020.

“The good news for our sport is that while the NFL season looked and felt noticeably different from previous years,” the Cleveland Browns center posted on the union’s website, “we learned that the game of football did not suffer at the expense of protecting its players more than ever before. Our process is to follow the science on what is safest for our guys, and many of the changes this past year — like no in-person offseason workouts/ practices, the extended acclimatio­n period before training camp and no preseason games — gave us a year of data that demonstrat­es maintainin­g some of these changes long term is in the best interest of the game.”

Tretter noted a 23% decrease in time missed for injuries, 30% reduction in concussion­s, drops in all categories of lower extremity strains and ACL tears within the five-year average, and a 45% decrease in heat-related illnesses.

“The regular season’s missed time injury rate fell within the normal range of the previous five years,” Tretter wrote. “That makes sense considerin­g there weren’t substantiv­e changes to our in-season practice and game-day schedules. Thanks to the new (offseason) acclimatio­n period, however, training camp saw its lowest injury rate in that same time frame. And, with no in-person practices in April, May, or June of last year, our players were able to prepare for the football season while avoiding unnecessar­y injuries.”

Nothing is finalized regarding the spring and summer programs. In the NFL memo, the teams were told they “should be prepared to conduct meetings virtually, at least during the early phase of the program. As was expressed during (Tuesday’s) meeting, we do not anticipate a duplicatio­n of last season’s virtual workout program.”

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