sports & the Coronavirus (Rams, NBA, etc)

Recent Forum Topics Forums The Rams Huddle sports & the Coronavirus (Rams, NBA, etc)

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  • #112151
    JackPMiller
    Participant

    Rudy Gobert of the Utah Jazz. He felt sick, and they found he has the Coronavirus. He is the first pro athlete that we know of that has the Coronavirus so far.

    #112152
    Avatar photozn
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    #112156
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    Rudy Gobert touched every microphone at Jazz media availability Monday, now reportedly has coronavirus

    https://www.cbssports.com/nba/news/rudy-gobert-touched-every-microphone-at-jazz-media-availability-monday-now-reportedly-has-coronavirus/

    With the NBA recently banning media from accessing locker rooms, players have begun fulfilling their media obligations at the podium. Gobert did so at Monday’s Utah Jazz shootaround. Afterward, he proceeded to touch every microphone on the stage, seemingly sending a message about his fearlessness in regards to the disease. It is unknown just how many people came into contact with those microphones after Gobert.

    • This reply was modified 4 years, 8 months ago by Avatar photoInvaderRam.
    • This reply was modified 4 years, 8 months ago by Avatar photoInvaderRam.
    #112167
    JackPMiller
    Participant

    His teammate, Donavon Mittchell was tested positive for the Coronavirus. How long will it be before it hits the MLB, NFL, and other team sports? I mean their athletes.

    In my mind, I think every pro and college athlete should be tested for the Coronavirus. No matter what sport right now. It is for the safety for the other athletes that don’t have it.

    #112207
    Avatar photozn
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    #112216
    Avatar photozn
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    Deadpool

    I have to imagine with travel restrictions amongst teams rising, here are some problems that will arise:

    1. I imagine the 30 player individual meetings will get cancelled. So you lose a chance to meet a guy in person.

    2. Medical rechecks that happen back in Indy down the road for anyone that had a medical red flag. Not great for the injured kid.

    3. Any player that couldn’t/wouldn’t test at the combine and was waiting for a Pro Day or personal workout day. Pro days are done or will be poorly attended.

    A team like the Rams that didn’t do a ton of combine interviews and didn’t have coaches at the combine are going to feel this. They now probably won’t have the chance to meet these kids in person, or have them in for a workout.

    Its unfortunate, and totally understandable, and at the same time impossible to predict, but it could be a real scramble coming down the stretch for Rams FO and scouting dept.

    The kids in the draft that are going to feel this the most are the ones with medical issues, kids with character issues and kids that flat out didn’t work out. I could really see some of these kids slide as the information teams usually can gather isn’t there.

    Anyhow, some food for thought as the draft and FA approaches.

    #112245
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    #112256
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    #112281
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    #112327
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    #112392
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    Marc Stein@TheSteinLine
    Important development for sport throughout the country: The CDC just announced it is recommending NO gatherings of 50+ people in the United States for the next EIGHT weeks

    Rich Hammond@Rich_Hammond
    This, presumably, would delay the start of in-person NFL offseason programs, which is April 20 for most teams. Not to mention the grand spectacle of the NFL draft.

    #112393
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    #112394
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    Tim Bontemps@TimBontemps
    The NBA has extended its ban on team practices indefinitely, league sources tell ESPN. Players are still able to work out individually at team facilities.

    #112643
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    #113153
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    #113165
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    at this point you gotta just stop stadium construction.

    #113187
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    #113244
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    #113247
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    Lindsay Jones@bylindsayhjones
    My takeaway from the NFL’s conference call with league execs today is that the optimistic messaging coming out of the league office is out of touch with the scary reality so many Americans are living right now. Is NFL aspirational or just naive?

    Frank Schwab@YahooSchwab
    My opinion on it is they’re trying hard to be a positive voice. They don’t need to sound any more alarms, those are blaring everywhere else. It doesn’t hurt them to be optimistic right now. I actually believe they’re trying to do right, and hoping it works out.

    #113255
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    The MMQB@theMMQB
    The NFL is a business, and the league’s message yesterday was to business partners. But @AlbertBreer says the league should be mindful of how its overly optimistic tone comes across

    ==

    The NFL Needs to Tone Down its Optimism About the 2020 Season
    On Tuesday the NFL gave maybe the most optimistic picture of the COVID-19 pandemic we’ve seen in weeks.

    ALBERT BREER

    https://www.si.com/nfl/2020/04/01/nfl-tone-down-optimism-coronavirus?utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=themmqb&utm_medium=social

    I understand the reasoning.

    The NFL is a business. One that generates 11-figure revenue numbers annually. It didn’t get there without prioritizing the bottom line, nor did its owners accumulate the wealth to buy teams by failing to find opportunity to profit around every corner.

    So free agency went on as planned. So the draft will too. So on Tuesday, NFL EVP and general counsel Jeff Pash painted perhaps the most optimistic picture of the COVID-19 pandemic that any of us have seen anywhere in weeks.

    “We’re pretty confident we’ll be able to start on schedule,” Pash said.

    And that was only doubling down on what he’d asserted earlier in the conference call.

    “On the season itself, our planning, our expectation is fully directed at playing a full season, starting on schedule and having a full regular season and a full set of playoffs, just as we did in 2019,” he said. “We take our guidance from the medical people, from [NFL chief medical officer] Dr. [Allen] Sills from [NFLPA chief medical officer] Dr. [Thomas] Mayer, from the outside consultants in infectious diseases, and from the CDC.”

    Again, I understand why. The NFL has partners, sponsors and advertisers to worry about. Just as it’s a scary time for you and me, it’s a scary time for big business. Spending isn’t going to be what it was. Institutions with long-standing relationships in the pro football community are going to have to pick their spots for the foreseeable future.

    Pash is speaking to them: We got you. We’re going to be America’s escape. We’re planning on it. And we want you to be a part of it. There’s nowhere your money will be safer. Because there will be football, and America will be eating it up when it gets here.

    The idea matches up perfectly with the decision to go forward with the new league year, which was, at the very least, an opportunistic move to pull in a captive audience, and the forceful nature with which they’re pushing ahead with the draft, which is, well, the same. It’s who they are, and how they got where they are, and so it’s not that hard to figure out what they’re doing here.

    But someone, anyone, at some point, should’ve raised their hand and asked the same question that could’ve saved the NFL a lot of trouble over the last decade, in countless scandals that made pro football look like a ruthless circus: Are we doing the right thing?

    Given the circumstances we’re all facing, I personally don’t think it’s right to threaten coaches or executives not to speak out about the problems, both human and football-wise, with keeping the draft scheduled for the end of April, as the NFL did last week. I’m also not sure it’s right to tell a society that needs to be taking every precaution possible—and needs to be treating this international crisis as something that will get a lot worse if we don’t—that everything’s going to be just fine in a few months.

    And maybe the NFL didn’t mean for it to come off that way. But it did.

    Which is a problem, and one that was completely avoidable, if someone in the office had just asked that very simple question of right and wrong.

    #113264
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    “…But someone, anyone, at some point, should’ve raised their hand and asked the same question that could’ve saved the NFL a lot of trouble over the last decade, in countless scandals that made pro football look like a ruthless circus: Are we doing the right thing?….”
    —————-

    Eyeroll.

    Yeah, ask a Corporation to put people over profit.

    w
    v

    #113294
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    #113309
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    #113310
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    #113914
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    Dianna Russini@diannaESPN
    According to Saints players I talked to, Head Coach Sean Payton told them this morning they are not having a team-lead offseason program even if rules change. Payton held a zoom meeting with over 80 players a short while ago and said “We are not having an offseason program.”

    Saints players were told “no virtual workouts, no online meetings, no workouts at the facility, even if its allowed Show up in July for training camp in the best shape of your life” They were told, “take care of your families, your health, and be ready this summer” #Saints

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