NFL: All business no buzz as Super Bowl week gets off to quiet start
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[February 02, 2021]
By Steve Keating
(Reuters) - The first signs that this
is going to be a very different Super Bowl week came early on Monday
when the usually glitzy Opening Night festivities were replaced by a
dry mid-morning kick-off to U.S. sport's biggest party.
Before COVID-19 forced a rewrite of the Super Bowl program, the
script called for airport photo oppportunities followed by some
Opening Night zaniness to lighten the mood prior to teams getting
down to the serious business of preparing for Sunday's National
Football League championship game.
But this year, to limit exposure to COVID-19, the reigning champion
Kansas City Chiefs will not even arrive in Tampa until Saturday
while the Buccaneers, the first team to play in and host a Super
Bowl, began the week in virtual solitary confinement fielding
questions on Zoom.
At past Opening Nights, fireworks and thumping music provided the
soundtrack as thousands of gridiron fans paid for the pleasure of
watching media from around the globe do their jobs -- asking
questions.
A televised prime time question-and-answer free-for-all for
thousands of media in a packed arena where very little was out of
bounds, Opening Night for some players and coaches was a grim
obligation but most had grown to embrace the madness.
The entire event on Monday, however, had all the buzz of a
shareholder meeting.
There were plenty of Super Bowl-related questions but none of the
memorable weird and whacky sound bites from questions asked by
interlopers dressed as super heroes and super models.
CRAZY DAY
For Super Bowl veterans like Tampa quarterback Tom Brady, who will be
playing in his 10th championship game, there seemed to be disappointment
as he stared blankly into a screen instead of out on dozens of cameras
and hundreds of media.
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Vince Lombardi Trophy on
display during a press conference before Super Bowl LIV at Hilton
Downtown. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports/File Photo
"How come I don't get to see them at all, how come I just get to see
me?," quizzed Brady. "It's a crazy media day. I'm sitting here in an
empty room
"It's very different than the other nine experiences."
The 43-year-old Brady did not have to field any proposals from an
interviewer wearing a wedding dress or take questions from an
impersonator wearing a Tom Brady mask asking what he thinks of Tom
Brady.
This year Media Day was all business.
Rob Gronkowski, the Bucs gregarious tight end who normally basks in
the glow of the spotlight, also acknowledged that this year's
experience was not quite the same.
"I'm just sitting here in a room by myself right now," he said.
"There's no one around, so like the juices aren't flowing as much as
if you're in a room with media people going crazy, asking questions,
fans cheering, music going.
"It still is Super Bowl Week but it is totally different and, for a
guy like myself, you appreciate all that, all that media, all that
attention, like all that excitement.
"But I mean we're in a pandemic right now."
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto, additional reporting Amy
Tennery; Editing by Ken Ferris)
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