NFL: COVID-19 remains 'major
challenge' as camps prepare to open, commissioner says
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[July 28, 2020]
(Reuters) - National Football
League (NFL) Commissioner Roger Goodell has said the new coronavirus
still poses challenges to the league as it prepares to open training
camps for all players on Tuesday.
With pre-season games canceled and fan attendance limited in many
stadiums across the United States, "the NFL in 2020 will not look
like other years," he wrote in an open letter to fans.
"Everyone in the team environment must follow rigorous health and
safety protocols to keep themselves and each other safe," added
Goodell. "When there is a positive test, strict regulations will be
enforced to isolate and care for that individual and to contain the
virus before it spreads."
The letter comes as a number of players on Major League Baseball's (MLB)
Miami Marlins team tested positive for COVID-19 just four days after
MLB started its shortened, coronavirus-delayed season, a potentially
ominous development for other major professional sports leagues in
North America.
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The NFL said it has worked with medical experts, public health
officials and state and local governments to develop its
return-to-play plan, with the league and players agreeing to changes
to the 2020 collective bargaining agreement on Friday.
Players and coaches must submit to regular testing, "including every
day for a while," said Goodell, and the league has previously stated
that any fans attending games must wear face coverings.
"In the months since the COVID-19 pandemic turned the world upside
down, we have navigated the time carefully, thoughtfully and in
partnership with the NFL Players Association with a shared goal of
playing a healthy and complete 2020 season," he added.
"COVID-19 will continue to present a major challenge to nearly every
area of American life. Football is no exception."
(Reporting by Amy Tennery; Editing by Ken Ferris)
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