Gov. Phil Murphy says Jets, Giants won’t have to quarantine before training camp

According to New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, the Jets will not have to quarantine before the beginning of training camp.

Despite New Jersey’s quarantine rule requiring individuals traveling from states seeing high COVID-19 numbers to isolate for 14 days, the Jets and Giants will not have to worry about quarantining before the beginning of training camp.

According to New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, New Jersey’s quarantine rule has a “carve-out out for essential travel.” Pro sports teams qualify for that carve-out, meaning both the Jets, whose facilities are located in Florham Park, and the Giants, who reside in East Rutherford, are exempt from isolating.

“We do have a carve-out for essential travel and a professional sports team would qualify for that carve-out,” Murphy said while appearing on SiriusXM NFL Radio on Friday. “We’d probably, without putting this in stone, I’m sure we’d probably want to do one, and more than one, test for the virus when they got here. Or ask them to take it as they’re leaving wherever their host state is. That’s the minimum standard.”

The Jets and Giants are scheduled to report to training camp on July 28. The same essential travel “carve-out” also applies to players traveling to New York and Connecticut, like members of the Buffalo Bills, NFL Network insider Ian Rapoport confirmed with New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s office.

“A 14-day quarantine doesn’t work in an NFL schedule,” Murphy said. “So, at least the testing piece would have to be there, and I think if anyone is symptomatic or they’ve tested positive already, I’d hope they wouldn’t get on the plane.”