NFL season a go; NFL will release full schedule with with plans for fans in stadiums
The NFL is going ahead with its fall season.
NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy spoke with ESPN and said the league will release the entire 17-week schedule next week with no alterations and plans to have fans in attendance at stadiums in the fall.
NFL schedule drop to include full 17-week slate, with visions of fans in the stands.
League is not considering centralized location for games.
https://t.co/BdpfhYFzRU— Jeremy Fowler (@JFowlerESPN) May 2, 2020
Via ESPN
The NFL isn’t altering its fall plans.
The league will release its 2020 schedule late next week without any major changes, league spokesman Brian McCarthy confirmed — including a Sept. 10 opener, the Super Bowl on Feb. 7 and visions of fans in the stands.
“We plan to start on time,” McCarthy said.
The NFL does have contingency plans in place just in case the pandemic worsens in the United States but for now, it seems as if they are hopeful there will be a full season.
Working with the NFL Players Association and medical experts, the league has drawn up contingency plans in case the coronavirus pandemic takes a turn for the worse.
One of those contingencies would be to delay the season until mid-October, according to the Sports Business Journal. Other options include playing in empty stadiums and no bye weeks have long been discussed.
the NFL is set to release full 17-week schedule next week & is planning for fans in the stands for the 2020 season. news via @JFowlerESPN https://t.co/KLjJK5QtuB
— kelly cohen (@ByKellyCohen) May 2, 2020
One option not on the table, a source told ESPN, is gathering players at a centralized location to execute a season. The NBA and Major League Baseball have discussed playing at a neutral site such as Walt Disney World, Las Vegas or Arizona, but the NFL doesn’t plan to do that.
According to Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk, the league believes there’s an “extremely small” chance the NFL season will be canceled this year.
Via Pro Football Talk
Per sources with direct knowledge of both the NFL’s deliberations and the current and expected medical and scientific developments in the coming weeks and months, there is an “extremely small” chance that there will be no NFL season in 2020.
So what would trigger the “extremely small” outcome? As one source put it, the information gleaned from fighting and studying the coronavirus to date would have to be proven dramatically incorrect by future behavior of the virus and the illness it causes in the people who are infected by it.