NFL: Dozens of players positive for
COVID-19 since training camps open, opt-out deadline passes
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[August 07, 2020]
By Amy Tennery
(Reuters) - Fifty-six National Football
League players have so far tested positive for COVID-19 since
training camps opened to rookies July 21, according to players'
union data compiled through Wednesday.
Camps opened for all players July 28, and the season is scheduled to
kickoff Sept. 10 with health and safety measures in place designed
to mitigate the spread of the coronavirus.
The deadline for players to opt out of the season was set for 4 p.m.
ET (2000 GMT) on Thursday, with more than 60 reportedly intending to
skip the 2020 campaign over COVID-19 concerns.
Eligible players who opt out voluntarily will receive a $150,000
stipend, while "high-risk" opt outs get $350,000, according to the
union, the National Football League Players Association. Health
issues that qualify a player for being considered high risk for
severe COVID-19 include cancer, type 2 diabetes, certain heart
conditions and asthma.
Buffalo Bills cornerback Tre'Davious White pushed back against
critics on Twitter amid reports he was considering skipping
the season, though it was not immediately clear if he had chosen to
opt out.
"Crazy that me choosing my family’s wellbeing over a game comes with
so called fans attacking and questioning me and saying I’m selfish,"
tweeted White, a 2019 Pro Bowl selection. "No you guys are selfish
for thinking that football is bigger than life."
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Saints players work out during a NFL training
camp in Metairie, Louisiana July 26, 2013. REUTERS/Sean Gardner
Offensive tackle Lucas Niang, a third-round draft choice of the
reigning Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs, and Cleveland
Browns guard Malcolm Pridgeon, opted out prior to Thursday's
deadline, according to Around the NFL.
With pre-season games canceled and attendance limited - or outright
banned - in stadiums across the country, Commissioner Roger Goodell
told fans in an open letter last week: "The NFL in 2020 will not
look like other years."
(Reporting by Amy Tennery; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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