Bears place CB Michael Joseph on reserve/COVID-19 list

The Chicago Bears have moved cornerback Michael Joseph from injured reserve to the reserve/COVID-19 list, the team announced on Saturday.

The Chicago Bears have moved cornerback Michael Joseph from injured reserve to the reserve/COVID-19 list, the team announced on Saturday.

Joseph, who was placed on injured reserve on Aug. 31, hasn’t been around his teammates or at Halas Hall since the start of the regular season. According to ChicagoBears.com, Joseph is “remotely under the care of the club’s medical team.”

Joseph, who joined the Bears in 2018 as an undrafted free agent, spent the previous two seasons on the practice squad. He was promoted to the active roster for the final two games of the 2019 season, but he did not play.

Joseph becomes the second Bears player to be placed on the reserve/COVID-19 list since the regular season started. Practice squad offensive lineman Badara Traore was placed on the list shortly after their Week 5 win against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and he has since been removed from that list.

Bears will be without OL coach Juan Castillo after close contact involving COVID-19

The Bears will be without OL coach Juan Castillo, who’s isolating after being in close contact with someone that tested positive for COVID.

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The Chicago Bears made it through the first quarter of the season without any COVID-19 scares. But over the last week, there have been a couple of concerns.

Practice squad offensive lineman Badara Traore was the first — and only, to this point — Bears player to test positive for COVID-19 on Saturday. The Bears had played on Thursday night — without practice squad players on the sideline — so there was limited exposure.

On Wednesday, Bears head coach Matt Nagy announced that the team would be without offensive line coach Juan Castillo, who is self-quarantining after being in close contact with someone that had tested positive for COVID. That person was not Traore, Nagy said. Castillo will not be at Halas Hall this week nor will he travel to Carolina for Sunday’s game against the Panthers.

“We’re just trying to be overly cautious to quarantine [Castillo] through Sunday through the guidance of the NFL and our medical experts,” said coach Matt Nagy. “And to his credit, it was self-reported, which, obviously, in these times is a selfless act.”

Assistant offensive line coach Donovan Raiola will fill in for Castillo on Sunday, who’s already had a hand in installs at practice this week.

“He’ll be down on the field and interacting with those guys,” Nagy said. “On gameday, it’s next-man-up mentality on the coaching side, and so this is an opportunity for him to grow. He did a hell of a job today in installs and I just thought it was fun to watch that happen. The guys have trust in him, and now for us as a coaching staff, we’ve got to be able to help him out to help those players out.”

From the start, the Bears have gotten ahead of these COVID protocols, and there were some recent changes to continue to exercise caution and keep these players, coaches and staff as safe as possible.

The Bears have limited opportunities for close contact, which includes distributing lunch in takeout containers rather than gathering in the lunch room and switched meetings from in-person to Zoom calls and limited the number of players allowed in the weight room at once.

“That, to us, is where we’re at right now, to try to do everything we can to help not just the Bears, but the NFL,” Nagy said. “We don’t want to be one of those 32 teams that can take this and make this go the other direction because of COVID.

“Whether that means taking two planes to an away game or having 12 buses go to a stadium, that’s what we’re doing right now. That’s a credit to our organization for allowing us to go above and beyond.”

 


 

Bears change practice itinerary for Monday as prep begins for Week 6

The Bears have changed their practice schedule for Monday, where they’ll hold a closed walkthrough practice where media won’t be allowed.

After a long weekend, the Chicago Bears return to Halas Hall on Monday to begin preparation for their Week 6 match-up against the Carolina Panthers.

But there will be some changes on Monday, as noted by the Chicago Tribune’s Dan Wiederer. The Bears have changed their practice schedule for Monday, where they’ll hold a closed walkthrough practice where media won’t be allowed in attendance.

There’s no official word on the change in scheduling, but it seems obvious.

While the Bears didn’t play on Sunday, they weren’t out of the headlines with Saturday’s news that practice squad offensive lineman Badara Traore had tested positive for COVID-19.

The good news is that practice squad players aren’t allowed on the sideline during games, which means Traore wasn’t around the active roster during Thursday’s game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Due to a short week, most of the practices leading up to the game were walkthroughs.

The Bears didn’t have any players test positive for COVID-19 on Saturday, and it’s likely they’re waiting for Sunday’s round of testing and playing it safe at this point.


 

A Bears practice squad player has tested positive for COVID-19

A member of the Bears practice squad has tested positive for COVID-19.

The Chicago Bears have done a good job following COVID-19 protocols this season, as they had no reports of players or staff contracting the virus.

According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, a member of the Bears practice squad has tested positive for COVID-19.

The Bears haven’t been at their facility since prior to Thursday night’s 20-19 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Practice squad players aren’t allowed on the sideline during games, so they weren’t around any other players or staff on Thursday.

Also, most of this week the Bears held walkthrough practices, where they’ve usually worn masks in the past.

The Bears have a 10-day break before they’re supposed to play the Carolina Panthers in Week 6.