NFL: Chiefs' Duvernay-Tardif watching Super Bowl from COVID-19 frontline
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[February 05, 2021]
By Frank Pingue
(Reuters) - Laurent Duvernay-Tardif
built an NFL career around protecting others but a deeper passion
for healthcare convinced him to give up a shot at defending a Super
Bowl championship with the Kansas City Chiefs to join the frontline
battle against COVID-19.
Less than three months after helping the Chiefs to a Super Bowl
victory last February, Duvernay-Tardif put his medical degree to use
by working as an orderly in a Montreal long-term care facility amid
the COVID-19 pandemic.
By July, the Chiefs' starting right guard decided to opt out of the
entire 2020 NFL season, figuring if he was going to take any
COVID-19-related risks he would rather it be through helping
patients rather than playing football.
"That was for sure the hardest decision I had to make in my life,"
Duvernay-Tardif told Reuters in a video interview from Montreal
ahead of his team's Super Bowl clash against hosts Tampa Bay on
Sunday.
"But five years from now, 10 years from now and for the next 40 years I
am going to be in the community of healthcare professionals so it made
more sense for me to stay here and I feel like my role was here to
contribute and fight the virus."
That passion led to Duvernay-Tardif, an offensive lineman once tasked
with protecting Chiefs standout quarterback Patrick Mahomes, taking on
duties like feeding and changing patients, inserting IVs, doing blood
draws and handing out medication.
And while Duvernay-Tardif's decision meant his body got a break from the
unrelenting physical toll NFL players endure throughout a season, his
current role has proven just as taxing from an emotional standpoint.
For Duvernay-Tardif, the duty of transferring patients who tested
positive for COVID-19 into the Montreal facility's "red zone" where he
said they faced long odds of ever leaving, is something that is "going
to leave a mark for sure".
NEEDED SPACE
Duvernay-Tardif said that when the NFL season kicked off last September
he needed some space and so did not follow the Chiefs too closely but
his efforts to tune out proved futile.
"You have those weird situations where you're working on a Monday and
all they talk about on TV is how good the Chiefs are in every patient's
room," said Duvernay-Tardif. "You got to live with that. Suddenly you're
reminded of your decision."
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Kansas City Chiefs
offensive guard Laurent Duvernay-Tardif during a press conference
for Super Bowl LIV at JW Marriott Turnberry. Mandatory Credit: Kirby
Lee-USA TODAY Sports
The 29-year-old Canadian said that while every big decision comes
with a little bit of regret he remains confident he made the right
move to trade in his NFL uniform for scrubs and that the Chiefs have
been supportive the whole way.
Since putting his NFL career on hold, Duvernay-Tardif's medical
scrubs and lab coat were placed on display at the Pro Football Hall
of Fame in Canton, Ohio.
Duvernay-Tardif was even one of five athletes recognized as
"Sportsperson of the Year: The Activist Athlete" by Sports
Illustrated last December.
Duvernay-Tardif said he plans to be back with the Chiefs for the
2021 NFL season and so, given the lockdown restrictions related to
the virus, built an outdoor gym at his Montreal home where he works
out with snow-covered weights to stay in shape.
"I'm training outside right now because that's all the space that I
have," said Duvernay-Tardif, who teamed up with Procter & Gamble
disinfectant spray Microban 24 this week as part of its "Most
Valuable Protector" campaign to honor frontline workers.
"The only thing that I can control is to make sure that I stay in
shape and that I show up in a great mindset and physical condition
to win my job back."
Duvernay-Tardif has been in contact with Chiefs players this season
but is also mindful of the high stakes nature of playoff football
and so doesn't want to interfere as they prepare to play on the
game's biggest stage.
Come Sunday, Duvernay-Tardif will be cheering on his Chiefs in their
bid to become the first NFL team in 16 years to repeat as Super Bowl
champions.
"I will be watching the game that's for sure, all by myself because
that's all we are allowed to do, and I'll be cheering for the
Chiefs," said Duvernay-Tardif.
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto, editing by Ed Osmond)
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