The NFL is planning on full stadiums in September. And even if they have to call an audible, itĆ¢ĀĀs the best approach.
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[FOX SPORTS INSIDER WITH MARTIN ROGERS]
In todayās FOX Sports Insider: While you might have missed it over the holiday weekend, the NFLās planning for full stadiums come September ā and thatās the right move ... we look at all the different scenarios the NBA is considering for its return to play ... and with the Truck Series back on track, thereās a bounty on Kyle Busch.
It is a little jarring to hear certainty in relation to the near and immediate future of American sports, and there is a simple reason for that.
Ever since the fraught and fractured days of early March, there have been a lot of developments, a lot of discussion, much speculation, a ton of nervousness ā and nothing, understandably, in the way of definitive fact as to what weāre going to see again and when.
So, when Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross came out and delivered what amounted to an assurance that the pro football campaign will go ahead as planned in just a few monthsā time, it provoked a couple of general reactions.
āI think there will definitely be a football season this year,ā Ross told CNBC, in an interview that primarily revolved around the American economic fallout from the COVID-19 crisis. āWe all miss our sports. The NFL, I think, will be ready to go. I know we are all looking forward to it. I know I am.ā
[STORY IMAGE 1]
The initial response, naturally, was one of celebration. After all these weeks of scraping the internet and the network archives for old sports, obscure sports, overseas sports and sports documentaries, the idea of a genuine, live, competitive football game is akin to slapping aloe on a sunburn. Aaaaaah.
But for many, it surely took just a split second for that to be followed by a, āWhoa, wait a minute,ā because the national sports fan base has been scorched by all this, and optimism has given way to understandable caution. The doubt and confusion that has surrounded every part of life for more than two months has manifested a skeptical streak in all of us.
Still, while Rossā words made a splash, an even bigger indicator of intent was given by NFL executive vice president of football operations Troy Vincent over the weekend. Vincentās comments got a little swallowed up by the holiday, and because they were paired with an admission that the leagueās pass interference replay rule had failed, but he wasnāt holding back.
āWeāre planning for full stadiums,ā Vincent told NBC Sports, āuntil the medical community tells us otherwise. Now, remember when weāre talking. Weāre talking about September ⦠August, September. So, thereās a lot that can happen here. So, weāre planning for full stadiums.ā
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Imagine it for a second. A full stadium, splashed with partisan color and heaving with cheering supporters. Weird, isnāt it? In one sense, a vibrant arena is a wonderful thought, but even when you look at old games and see fans bunched together, pressed against each other, breathing each otherās air, it puts the teeth on edge. We are not used to being within six feet of someone at the checkout counter anymore, let alone having people sandwiched on either side of us.
But the thing to remember here is that it is not the NFLās job to look at it through the same lens as us. They need to transport their minds into the future and prepare for how things may or may not look and feel at that stage.
There are 107 days between now and the first scheduled game of the regular season, between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Houston Texans, on Sept. 10. If you go back 107 days in the other direction, it would take you to the Sunday after the Super Bowl, back when the coronavirus was this thing youād heard about on the news that was taking place in China.
We were still a month away from sports shutting down and life as we knew it changing. Devastatingly, nearly 100,000 Americans that were then living, no longer are.
[STORY IMAGE 3]
As a public, many people feel differently to how they did a month ago, and everyone feels differently to how they did in March. Who knows what things will look like in September? Who knows what the figures will say and what advances will have been made by then?
In a sense, the NFL is actually taking the safest and smartest course of action. It is easier to plan for full stadiums and work backwards from there, rather than get ready for empty venues and then try to move forward accordingly.
Furthermore, even at full capacity, there is the strong likelihood that things would not be quite the same as before. Would it be a full stadium of fans with masks emblazoned with team logos, all of whom have had their temperature taken at the gate, or been able to show proof of having tested negative? Later on, would it be a stadium full of fans who have received a vaccine?
Anything, and everything, seems possible right now.
āWe also know we have to plan for half stadiums,ā Vincent added. āThree quarters. So, weāre planning for all those different scenarios. But first and foremost, weāre making every effort working with the medical community, if we can have those stadiums with all people, until they tell us otherwise when that time comes, thatās our plan. Thatās our plan of action.ā
[STORY IMAGE 4]
Heart-aching though the tragedy has been, the point here is that it is impossible to tell what developments will have been presented to the country by September. The uniqueness of the current situation also affects our mindset in unavoidable ways. The more each day seems like the last, the more it seems never-ending, that we have entered an altered state where things will always be this way.
Thankfully, thatās not the case, yet it is part of the reason why restarting things like sports, which give us a point of reference to our calendars, are considered a priority for the lawmakers in Washington.
Sitting here, as the end of May approaches, it boggles the brain to think that football can go ahead with full stadiums in time for the start of the season. September seems so soon, life seems so disjointed, such logistics seem totally unworkable.
But thankfully, the problem is not ours; it is for people whose entire job revolves around it. The NFL is getting ready for the best case scenario, and adapting backwards from there. It is the right approach ā and if they pull it off, it will show that things are close to normal once more.
[STORY IMAGE 5]
Here's what others have said...
Mike Florio, Pro Football Talk: āThis public statement meshes with what weāve been hearing privately for weeks, that the league believes circumstances will change sufficiently by September to allow both for games to proceed and for fans to attend them. From advances in diagnostic testing to advances in antigen testing to a better understanding of what it means to test positive for coronavirus antibodies, itās entirely possible that anyone who chooses to show up for games will be permitted to do so. ... So, yes, the plan is to play the games and to allow people to fill stadiums to watch them. Although the weeks will fly by quickly from Memorial Day to Labor Day, the medical advances quietly but surely happening out of view will quite possibly allow football season to proceed as normal, even at a time when things donāt still donāt feel anything close to normal.ā
Chris Cwik, Yahoo Sports: āWhile the NFL currently expects full stadiums, Vincent makes it clear they wonāt force the issue. If the medical community determines itās not safe to have a large group of people gathered together in a stadium amid the coronavirus pandemic, the league will listen. Vincent admits the league already has separate plans in case stadiums can only be half full. At least one NFL team is being cautious regarding ticket sales. The Pittsburgh Steelers are making 50 percent of their tickets available to fans just in case social distancing restrictions remain in place in August. Being cautious isnāt the worst idea right now. While the NFL expects full stadiums in 2020, the league is wise to have contingency plans in place in case it doesnāt happen.ā
Peter King, NBC Sports: āI think if I ran an NFL team, or owned one, and Roger Goodell came to me today and said: āYouāve got a choice: open Sept. 13 with no fans, and gradually get them back in the stadium in October and be back to capacity by Thanksgiving if thereās no significant flareup of the pandemicāor wait till mid-October and start play at 50 percent capacity, with more fans in stadiums as the year progressesā ... Iād vote to play Sept. 13, on schedule. Because we just donāt know what the future holds. We donāt know if thereās going to be a second wave around Thanksgiving or later. Iād rather just play the games and try to get fans back when itās universally safe than hold off, play four or five weeks, then have the disease rear its head and cause the season to stop. No guarantee that this will happen, of course, but if the environment is good to play, even without fans, Iād want to play.ā
[IN OTHER WORDS]
- Could the return of the NBA look more like soccerās World Cup? [The Ringerās Kevin OāConnor explains]( why a group stage-based approach might be best.
- Indeed, there are a number of proposals for how the NBAās postseason might unfold. [At ESPN, Kevin Pelton breaks down]( how each scenario would help or hurt each team the most.
- Dak Prescottās contract status remains one of the NFLās biggest question marks, but [Troy Aikman tells Sports Illustratedās Mike Fisher]( that he āloves everything aboutā Dak ā and expects the Cowboys to pay him.
[THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED]
[THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED](
Way back in the halcyon days of February, you likely recall that Kevin Harvick posted a bounty for Kyle Busch in the NASCAR Truck Series, offering $50,000 to any full-time Cup Series driver who could finish ahead of Busch. And with the trucks getting back to action tonight, [Harvick let the world know]( that the bounty was still on ā only now, the money will go to charity. Yet it doesnāt look like Busch is sweating the bounty too much. Get it? Paper towels? Very clever, Kyle.
[VIEWER'S GUIDE]
NASCAR Truck Series: Charlotte (FS1, 8 p.m. ET)
The Truck Series makes its on-track return at Charlotte Motor Speedway after a two-month hiatus, as Kyle Busch looks to follow up his overtime Xfinity win on Monday with a Truck win tonight ā and stave off those bounty hunters.
A Future WWE: The FCW Story (FS1, 11 p.m. ET)
Before NXT and the world-class WWE Performance Center, there was Florida Championship Wrestling, WWEās no-frills talent-development system that, despite its humble settings, gave rise to some of this eraās most dominant Superstars.
WWE Backstage (FS1, 12 a.m. ET)
Seth Rollins returns to Backstage, and Jeff Jarrett joins the show as he and Booker T look back at one of the most infamous events in WCW history: Bash at the Beach 2000.
[BET OF THE DAY]
[BET OF THE DAY]
Odds provided by [FOX Bet](
NBA Championship winner
Milwaukee Bucks: +240
Los Angeles Lakers: +280
Los Angeles Clippers: +340
Houston Rockets: +1200
Boston Celtics+ 2000
As the NBA looks to resume its season, the Bucks are the favorite to hoist the Larry OāBrien trophy ā but, perhaps unsurprisingly, theyāre not the most popular pick. According to our insights, fans are almost equally split between the two Los Angeles squads, with some interest in the Rockets as a dark horse, as well, at 12-to-1. If you do want to wager on Giannis & Co., though, you might be interested in the fact that the Bucks are only -188 to win the Eastern Conference, with the Celtics, Raptors, and 76ers all going off at +700.
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ā Gary Player
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