obiken wrote:Losses 9ers, Bills, Cowboys, Cards, Rams. 11-5. According to ESPN
obiken wrote:River the bigger question is are we going to even have football. Our game at Oregon vs Ohio State Brown just killed. It cost us Millions.
jshawaii22 wrote:The key to all this is the NFL's "luck" that the virus came just after the Super Bowl. We are all living in a day-to-day world, but it's only May 8th. The first game is 4 months away, and the NFL built 3 weeks into the front end of the schedule to potentially move back.
jshawaii22 wrote:The 4 months is longer then the entire time that we have been dealing with this and look at the progress.
jshawaii22 wrote:There is too much $$$ involved not to try to have a season. At the rate the scientific community is progressing, I wouldn't bet on there not being a wide-spread test available by the fall. Maybe there won't be fans in the stadiums, and maybe some teams (Seahawks maybe one of them, as with the Cali teams) will have to move away from their home city to make it happen, but if any sport can pull it off, it's the NFL.
jshawaii22 wrote:As for the Seahawks schedule... not much to say. #1 is flight miles again. I think Baltimore travels less the whole year then our roundtrip to Miami.
jshawaii22 wrote:
The key to all this is the NFL's "luck" that the virus came just after the Super Bowl. We are all living in a day-to-day world, but it's only May 8th. The first game is 4 months away, and the NFL built 3 weeks into the front end of the schedule to potentially move back.
It's going to be difficult. There's approximately 20 states that the NFL has teams in, and they all have to be able to be on the same page in order for the league to open in a competitive fashion. You can't have the 3 California teams playing in front of empty or 1/4 stadiums while the rest of the league is playing in front of packed stadiums as it would create a competitive issue. Indeed, CA's governor is on record as saying it's unlikely they'll be playing in front of full stadiums until a vaccine is available, and that's not likely until January.
jshawaii22 wrote:
The 4 months is longer then the entire time that we have been dealing with this and look at the progress.
Most of the progress has been in NYC. Factor that out and the picture changes dramatically. Rural America is beginning to see more cases. My community, a 3.5 hour drive from Seattle, is a typical example. We're currently a hotspot, with confirmed cases, hospitalizations, and deaths all continuing to rise. We have a Tyson meat packing plant that has over 200 cases and 2 deaths linked to it.
There is hope in that the second wave that's sure to come will be less transferrable due to the summertime temperatures and that we should be more prepared this time around.
jshawaii22 wrote:
There is too much $$$ involved not to try to have a season. At the rate the scientific community is progressing, I wouldn't bet on there not being a wide-spread test available by the fall. Maybe there won't be fans in the stadiums, and maybe some teams (Seahawks maybe one of them, as with the Cali teams) will have to move away from their home city to make it happen, but if any sport can pull it off, it's the NFL.
First off, it's not the NFL's decision. It's the Governors of each state that has an NFL team. The NFL is not going to try to swim upstream against the state Governors. Secondly, it's going to be pretty darn hard for a Governor to justify allowing the NFL with their multi million dollar players open for business when nearly a quarter of the rest of the nation is out of work. The NFL is likely to be the last group to be given a green light given the 70k+ jamb packed stadiums.
don't know how well relocating games to other venues in other states would work. How would Idaho feel with a bunch of infected fans from Washington invading their state? Doesn't sound like good politics to me.
jshawaii22 wrote:No one said it wouldn't be difficult, but, lets assume no fans for right now, as "fans" aren't the issue, TV + advertising revenue is the issue. The NFL can play in empty stadiums, as that's probably around 10% of their income, and if you accept that, then the teams can move anywhere the state governments will allow it. That includes doubling up or more to each available NFL stadium. Florida probably has 6 stadiums that are NFL quality, if you include the Orange bowl and one or 2 college stadiums. Do you think the players, who won't be paid if the games don't take place (except for bonuses they already have) wouldn't want to play, even if it meant empty stadiums? As the NBA was looking at, Orlando has 150,000 hotel rooms by itself and you could setup team "camps" as needed.
jshawaii22 wrote:Unfortunately, the number of rural deaths probably doesn't matter to the NFL or to the 'open' state Governments. What's happening in other places around the country, or even in their own state, as long as the economy moves forward, and having NFL playing games is a start toward that goal.
jshawaii22 wrote:But without fans or even with the idea of limited fans, if Inslee decides that the Seahawks can't use their own stadium, do you really think that would stop the team or the NFL from finding one that does? Come on, man, this is the New World Order we're looking at.
Yes, I do. As I said above, the league is extremely sensitive to how the pubic perceives them. If Inslee says no, they aren't going to say "screw you" and move to Idaho or Montana for the season.
jshawaii22 wrote:and that RD is one of the major billion $$$ questions, isn't it? Per a PFT blog, the 49ers have already started their search today, just in case Cali's Gov won't even let them open up their training facility and you can bet a "Plan-B" for the season is also in the works, as it is for all the teams in the same potential situation.
jshawaii22 wrote:I just don't think anyones feelings are the issue. Look at the ratings of the DRAFT for goodness sake... fans just want to see football, no matter where your team is playing it. Millions watch on TV / via Amazon and other devices and around 70k see the game live.
jshawaii22 wrote:My opinion is that a lot of things can and will change in the next 60 days, hopefully to the positive, and more and more States and cities continue to move towards all the time face covers, social distancing and using common sense as a way of life to continue forward. Common sense dictates that if you are in a 'health group' that says to stay isolated, you will. I'm not heading to the beach any time soon.
jshawaii22 wrote:My point is, if you can isolate 1 million people, you can do it for around 300 people, per team. And Hawaii couldn't close the airports to American tourists, who still come, but are verified and tested at the airport and must isolate for 14 days (same or similar to what the NFL would have to do to just start)
And there will be players and others that for any number of reasons can't or won't or are forbid by medical to come and that will have to be OK.
Anyone in a high-risk group. Maybe we'll need a new head coach. Time will tell how and if this goes down. The 2 months is to open typical training camps. They really have at least 3 months or more and cutting preseason to 2 games is a start.
jshawaii22 wrote:https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2020/05/11/nfl-season-dr-fauci-coronavirus-fmia-peter-king/
Here's an interview with Dr. Fauci, who seems to cover all the bases, both good and bad. Good Read.
jshawaii22 wrote:https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2020/05/11/nfl-season-dr-fauci-coronavirus-fmia-peter-king/
Here's an interview with Dr. Fauci, who seems to cover all the bases, both good and bad. Good Read.
RiverDog wrote:Excellent article, thanks for sharing it. It pretty much reinforces what we've all been saying, that there's no way of telling what the season is going to look like.
c_hawkbob wrote:Which is one reason I picked a December game to set my sights on, even then I think my odds are short of 50/50.
c_hawkbob wrote:Back to the schedule, if the games are played as scheduled I really dig it!
1 Sept. 13 at Falcons 1 p.m. ET Fox
2 Sept. 20 vs. Patriots (SNF) 8:20 p.m. ET NBC
3 Sept. 27 vs. Cowboys 4:25 p.m. ET Fox
4 Oct. 4 at Dolphins 1 p.m. ET Fox
5 Oct. 11 vs. Vikings (SNF) 8:20 p.m. ET NBC
6 BYE — — —
_____________________________________________
7 Oct. 25 at Cardinals 4:05 p.m. ET Fox
8 Nov. 1 vs. 49ers 4:25 p.m. ET Fox
9 Nov. 8 at Bills 1 p.m. ET Fox
10 Nov. 15 at Rams 4:25 p.m. ET Fox
11 Nov. 19 vs. Cardinals (TNF) 8:20 p.m. ET
_____________________________________________
12 Nov. 30 at Eagles (MNF) 8:15 p.m. ET ESPN
13 Dec. 6 vs. Giants 1:05 p.m. ET Fox
14 Dec. 13 vs. Jets 1:05 p.m. ET CBS
15 Dec. 20 at Redskins 1 p.m. ET Fox
16 Dec. 27 vs. Rams 4:05 p.m. ET CBS
17 Jan. 3 at 49ers 4:25 p.m. ET Fox
Three almost equal segment separated after the first 5 games by the bye ... then after the next five games by the mini bye (created by having a Thursday night game followed 11 days later by a Monday night game) ... then a 6 game push to the playoffs.
It really couldn't get much better =)
jshawaii22 wrote:The NFL (so far) has kept all teams on equal footing as far as opening up their facilities, access to meetings and team sponsored events and I don't see any reason they would all of a sudden decide not to continue that through at least the beginning of the season.
This in mind, I don't see any fans at any stadium until ALL teams can have fans, even a limited number like NASCAR is going to start with 5000 at Taladega and see how that works. I know it's not the same ( one race at a time vs 16 a week for the NFL) but I just can't see them allowing fans for some teams and none for others.
Games without fans would be weird that's for sure, but more for the players and TV, not the fans.
It's also not unprecedented in sports. Soccer, in Europe and South America has been forced for various reasons to do this and they survived. For most of us who only watch it on TV it really doesn't change my outlook or desire for the game. Bring it on.
jshawaii22 wrote:According to this one NFL source, it looks like whenever they start, cities that allow fans at any level will be allowed to have them come to the games. Teams that don't, don't. That's the first time that the NFL has now declared "fairness" to no longer be a factor in the restart.
https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2020/06/23/nfl-attendance-will-be-determined-state-by-state-county-by-county/
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