The very nature of the sport tells you that playing football during a pandemic would be playing with a virulent fire that rages in too many hot spots that seem to grow hotter by the day.
The economics are a matter of contention between management and the union because it is always about the money at some point — just ask MLB.
But for the NFL, this is more about safety than it is for any of the other professional sports leagues.
It is our collision sport — the only one that features blocking and tackling and repeated huddling — and with training camps scheduled to open on July 28 for all 32 teams, the hit has hit the fan, and it appears possible that a delay of game may now be necessary.
This is unlike the MLB brouhaha where the safety of the players fell in line quickly after the unsavory economic tug-of-war resulted in a 60-game season.
This is safety first.
The issues
Daily testing: The union wants it. The league has advocated three weekly tests. With hot spots in Florida, Georgia, Texas and Arizona, and 140,000 deaths across America and counting, daily testing should be a no-brainer.
Preseason games: The union doesn’t want any and prefers a 21-day ramp-up period. The NFL will want one as a COVID-19 trial run.
Quarantine procedures: There is currently no number of positive tests that would force an automatic team quarantine.
“As a union,” National Football League Players Association president JC Tretter said recently, “our most important job is keep our players safe and alive.”
He also said: “More so than any other sport, the game of football is the perfect storm for virus transmission,” a chilling reality enforced on a union conference call Friday by ageless Rams tackle Andrew Whitworth, who revealed that he and his wife and children and father-in-law contracted the highly contagious virus.
The NFL continues to proceed with business as usual.