Leigh Steinberg: What the 2020 NFL season could look like amid the coronavirus pandemic

NFL superagent Leigh Steinberg examines the factors that will shape the 2020 NFL season and how the league must evolve in the new normal.

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[Editor’s note: Sports agent Leigh Steinberg is writing a series of guest columns for Touchdown Wire examining pro football topics from his perspective of expertise after more than four decades in and around the game.]

The record television ratings for the 2020 NFL Draft illustrate the great hunger that exists for the return of NFL football. The draft dominated the sports news cycle for weeks and captured great audience numbers. I believe that all NFL stakeholders, starting with the league office, individual NFL teams and broadcast partners, will seize an opportunity to be thought leaders in how America brings back live sports over the next four months.

From the Super Bowl, to the scouting combine, to the draft and the forthcoming announcement of next season’s schedule, the NFL has done a great job of creating sports content. Now, the NFL has time on its side compared to the NBA, NHL and MLB with the start of the regular season more than four months away.

So how does the NFL conduct a season facing and unprecedented health emergency caused by the coronavirus? Scouting for the draft was limited, with no in-person contact between teams and draftees allowed after mid-March. Ordinarily, the NFL calendar soon would feature rookie minicamps and veteran minicamps, followed by OTAs at team facilities. Those instead will be supplanted by virtual OTAs. This takes away the great advantage that contemporary rookies and franchises typically have to spend weeks together building chemistry. By working together in person with coaches and other players and mastering the playbook, this normally helps players to show up for training camp in July with an enhanced level of familiarity and advancement in the offseason program.

How the NFL handles this challenge will have massive implications beyond the practical questions. The NFL is by far the most popular sport in America, as well as the most popular televised form of entertainment. It looms large over American culture. So every detail of how this season rolls out will be heavily scrutinized and symbolic for the rest of the sports landscape.

The foremost consideration will be protecting the health and safety of team personnel, players and fans. Unfortunately, no one can accurately predict what the state of the coronavirus crisis will be in late July, when training camps ordinarily open.

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What could a 2020 NFL season look like? Players already live in quarantine-type settings for the first few weeks of training camp. They could report to camp and be tested to see if they have or previously had the virus. Those who are deemed healthy could have their temperatures checked daily and be closely monitored to maintain the overall health of the players, coaches and staff. A player who tests positive or becomes sick could be quarantined until he is fully recovered.

The season still could have a normal start date. We will find out more when the schedule is released, which is expected to happen later this week. Players report to the facility every day for practice, and testing could take place there as well. Whatever the NFL decides will be handled collectively, with all 32 teams following the same safety practices.

If games are played on time, the next question is who can attend. Playing games with no fans present is an option. In that case, pregame and postgame festivities, game coverage, fantasy football and merchandise purchases all could be sustained. The existing television contracts with the networks would be honored. National television provides roughly $200 million per franchise for the season and is the largest form of revenue. The broadcasts would have the same graphics, production values and announcers with or without fans, although the lack of crowd noise and fan shots would have to be creatively addressed by the league’s broadcast partners.

Arrowhead Stadium
Kansas City Chiefs fans surely would love to visit Arrowhead Stadium this season to watch the Super Bowl champions, but they might not get the opportunity. (Jeff Curry-USA TODAY Sports)

If there were no gate ticket receipts, it would signal an immense revenue hit for franchises. Owners probably would approach the NFLPA seeking some kind of relief from the obligations to pay players at the same contractually mandated figures. Given the fact that a new collective bargaining agreement was finished unexpectedly earlier this offseason, without the heavy posturing and acrimony that past negotiations have engendered, perhaps that same spirit could yield a deal quickly.

Games played without fans would create an eerie atmosphere in stadiums. Players are used to feeding off the energy of fans, especially at home, and no one really knows how this would alter competitive balance and performance. Synergistic interplay between fans and players would be missing. Maybe there are ways for teams to feature some of their most loyal fans on the broadcast, as they did during the draft. Creativity and ingenuity will be welcomed if it brings back sports and camaraderie.

From a competitive standpoint, the lack of crowd noise certainly would make life easier on an offense trying to overcome a difficult third-down conversion on the road. It would be interesting to see if the resulting number of offside penalties would be reflected in the stat sheet.

Now, what if there were a regulated amount of fans at these games? Perhaps spectators could be spread out in seat locations that maintain social distancing. This might mean that stadiums would sell only a fraction of their usual seating capacity, using scientific input to determine a safe number.

Fans could have their temperatures checked as they entered the stadium. More antibacterial soap dispensers could be installed, disinfectant wipes and plastic gloves could be made available. There could be a requirement for fans to wear masks. For the most part, Americans across the country have complied beautifully with state mandates and requests to stay home — so I’m sure they will comply with practices that allow them to safely attend their favorite sporting events.

Could concessions and memorabilia be sold? Stadium staff could place six-foot distance markings on the ground for concessionaires and perhaps open fewer stands, allowing fans to maneuver through concourses with more space.

Could stadiums accommodate full crowds safely in 2020? That depends on the progress that is made in containment between now and then. It is a safer for government officials and media alarmists to take a position that completely eliminates risk.

This football season should be played as normally as possible for the sake of athletes with short playing careers, thousands of jobs provided by the industry, and the enjoyment of fans across the country. Creative thinking can be combined with prudence for the benefit of all involved.

Leigh Steinberg pioneered the agent industry on his way to becoming the preeminent agent in the sports world. With an unrivaled history of record-setting contracts, Leigh has secured more than $3 billion for 300-plus pro athlete clients and directed more than $750 million to various charities around the world. He has represented the No. 1 overall pick in the NFL draft an unprecedented eight times. He also has represented 10 Hall of Famers — Warren Moon, Troy Aikman, Steve Young, Derrick Thomas, Bruce Smith, Thurman Thomas, Kevin Greene, Kenny Easley, Howie Long and Edgerrin James — 62 first-round draft picks and over 150 Pro Bowl clients. In Leigh’s current practice, he partners with Chris Cabott to represent Patrick Mahomes, Aaron Jones, Jayon Brown and many other rising stars.

Leigh Steinberg: Why 2020 NFL Draft isn’t any riskier than usual

The original NFL superagent explains why he believes a shorter evaluation period caused by the coronavirus won’t harm teams in this year’s draft.

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[Editor’s note: Sports agent Leigh Steinberg is writing a series of guest columns for Touchdown Wire examining pro football topics from his perspective of expertise after more than four decades in and around the game.]

There has been much collective agonizing and hang wringing about whether the 2020 NFL Draft results will be productive given the cessation of in-person scouting midway through the process.

Pro scouting days on college campuses, individual visits with players, combine physical rechecks and visits by players to franchises all were eliminated by Commissioner Roger Goodell as he responded to the coronavirus crisis by issuing a stay-at-home order for team personnel. This will be my 46th NFL draft representing players, and I predict that the passage of five years will show the players drafted this year and their contributions to teams will be more dynamic than players taken in the past.

When I began representing NFL players in 1975 with QB Steve Bartkowski, who was picked No. 1 overall by the Atlanta Falcons, the draft was held in January. Teams relied on their scouts’ reports, game film and the performance of players in all-star games, and then they went ahead and drafted. There was no scouting combine until 1982 when the first one was held in Tampa, Florida, in a greatly abbreviated form. There were no pro scouting days held on college campuses. There were no player visits to team facilities.

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A comparison of the career success of first-round picks in 1975 to first-round picks in 2005 draft shows that the 1975 pre-draft evaluations produced more successful careers – even though the evaluation process was extended in later years.

Why was this?

Best predictor of future success is past success

Studying how players actually perform using game film is the most reliable way to gauge the likelihood that a player will have a successful pro career. This is the best way to see how a player performs in game conditions. For a franchise quarterback, the real test is how he performs under adversity. When the quarterback has thrown a couple interceptions — the crowd is starting to boo, and the game is getting out of hand — what does that player do? Can he compartmentalize, adopt a quiet mind, shake off past miscues and elevate his level of play to lift a team to victory. When Patrick Mahomes did this in the playoffs and Super Bowl this year, it was a reflection of what could be seen from his college game film – not his pro day performance.

Mike Mamula Eagles
The Eagles drafted Boston College’s Mike Mamula with the No. 7 overall pick in 1995 after he dazzled at the scouting combine with a 4.58-second 40-yard dash and a 38.5-inch vertical jump. He would play five NFL seasons, without a Pro Bowl selection. (Rick Stewart / Getty Images)

Overreliance on measurables, testing

The scouting combine tests players in a 40-yard dash, vertical leap, broad jump, bench press and lateral three-cone drill. When a wide receiver or defensive back runs a 4.3 40, he often vaults into the first round. What is not measured is how well the receiver runs routes and catches the ball. The 40 time also does not measure work ethic or performance in the clutch. The most famous workout warrior was Philadelphia Eagles defensive end Mike Mamula, who dominated the combine and was the No. 7 overall pick in 1995. He had a notably abbreviated career.

In 2003, we represented Lance Briggs, a linebacker from the University of Arizona. He was a sensational college player, but he didn’t post dynamic numbers at the combine and was drafted in the third round. He was an immediate success with the Chicago Bears and would be named to seven Pro Bowls during his career. He had 103 solo tackles during his second year with the Bears and 113 in his fourth.

Aaron Jones Green Bay Packers
Packers running back Aaron Jones was a steal as a fifth-round selection, as his 40-yard dash time belied the ability he showed on game film. (Jeff Hanisch-USA TODAY Sports)

In 2017, UTEP running back Aaron Jones ran a 4.56 in the 40 at the combine and was drafted by Green Bay in the fifth round. In his third year, he gained 1,000 yards and tied for the league lead in touchdowns. UCLA linebacker Jayon Brown followed the same pattern and also was drafted in the fifth round in 2017. He made an immediate impact with the Titans and had 108 combined tackles last year. By focusing on combine standouts, teams overlooked the real talent that can only be found on the game tape by players such as Alvin Kamara (third round, 2017), Hunter Renfrow (fifth round, 2019) and many others.

Paralysis by overanalysis

The most visible actions that front offices take are their selection of draft picks. They are scrutinized by their owners and other teams, and the track record can impact career viability. Fans and media also are vocal critics. Bill Polian was a gifted talent evaluator who made draft selections that turned three franchises — Buffalo, Carolina and Indianapolis — into winners. His services were in great demand. I would venture to guess that his process was focused on basic elements such as game film, background research and character assessment. Although the current evaluation tools are helpful in theory, we don’t have any proof that they actually are making organizations or individuals better talent evaluators. There is an abundance of information and so much public scrutiny in this process that it can cause executives to agonize, second-guess themselves and make mistakes.

Below are charts of the first-round selections in the 2005 and 1975 drafts, contrasting the era of April drafts to a time when the event was held in January, with a much shorter evaluation period. Career starts, via pro-football-reference, are included as a rough indicator of future productivity.

2005 NFL Draft

Team Player Pos. Starts
1. 49ers Alex Smith QB 161
2. Dolphins Ronnie Brown RB 74
3. Browns Braylon Edwards WR 93
4. Bears Cedric Benson RB 71
5. Bucs Carnell Williams RB 58
6. Titans Adam Jones CB 104
7. Vikings Troy Williamson WR 24
8. Cardinals Antrel Rolle S 146
9. Redskins Carlos Rogers CB 123
10. Lions Mike Williams WR 30
11. Cowboys DeMarcus Ware OLB 173
12. Chargers Shawne Merriman OLB 59
13. Saints Jamaal Brown OT 84
14. Panthers Thomas Davis OLB 174
15. Chiefs Derrick Johnson OLB 170
16. Texans Travis Johnson DT 38
17. Bengals David Pollack LB 6
18. Vikings Erasmus James DE 12
19. Rams Alex Barron OT 75
20. Cowboys Marcus Spears DE 90
21. Jaguars Matt Jones WR 15
22. Ravens Mark Clayton WR 65
23. Raiders Fabian Washington CB 58
24. Packers Aaron Rodgers QB 174
25. Redskins Jason Campbell QB 79
26. Seahawks Chris Spencer C 95
27. Falcons Roddy White WR 149
28. Chargers Luis Castillo DT 79
29. Colts Marlin Jackson DB 32
30. Steelers Heath Miller TE 167
31. Eagles Mike Patterson DT 108
32. Patriots Logan Mankins OG 161

Notes: How did Aaron Rodgers fall to No. 24, when he was widely considered a candidate to be picked No. 1 overall. Many teams were unwilling to take a chance on him in the first round. Do they really trust the best player available adage or not? The Packers already had Brett Favre and only took Rodgers because he was by far and away the best player left on the board, regardless of positional need.

Overall, this was a solid group of first-round picks. The problem with the 2005 draft was that most of the best picks came outside of the top 10.

1975 NFL Draft

Team Player Pos. Starts
1. Falcons Steve Bartkowski QB 127
2. Cowboys Randy White DT 165
3. Colts Ken Huff OG 104
4. Bears Walter Payton RB 184
5. Browns Mack Mitchell DE 44
6. Oilers Robert Brazile LB 147
7. Saints Larry Burton WR 25
8. Chargers Gary Johnson DT 123
9. Rams Mike Fanning DT 50
10. 49ers Jimmy Webb DT 74
11. Rams Dennis Harrah OT 144
12. Saints Kurt Schumacher OT 20
13. Lions Lynn Boden OG 47
14. Bengals Glenn Cameron LB 103
15. Oilers Don Hardeman RB 29
16. Patriots Russ Francis TE 148
17. Broncos Louis Wright CB 165
18. Cowboys Thomas Henderson LB 38
19. Bills Tom Ruud LB 5
20. Rams Doug France OT 87
21. Cardinals Tim Gray S 49
22. Chargers Mike Williams CB 101
23. Dolphins Darryl Carlton OT 36
24. Raiders Neal Colzie CB 51
25. Vikings Mark Mullaney DE 97
26. Steelers Dave Brown CB 203

Notes: Even without all of the bells and whistles of today’s scouting process, teams managed a better success rate on first round-selections than in 2005. More than half of the 26 picks had great careers, and many of them played a decade-plus in the NFL. Three of the top six picks — Randy White, Walter Payton and Robert Brazile — would become Hall of Famers.


In 2020, teams have massive informational resources. They have reports from their in-house scouts, attendance at games, game film, all-star games, combine analytics and one-on-one interviews. They have Zoom interviews, and in cases like Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, a filmed pro scouting day. They also have reports from security firms that have researched players’ off-field behavior since grade school. They have more than enough data to make intelligent choices in this year’s draft.

Leigh Steinberg pioneered the agent industry on his way to becoming the preeminent agent in the sports world. With an unrivaled history of record-setting contracts, Leigh has secured more than $3 billion for 300-plus pro athlete clients and directed more than $750 million to various charities around the world. He has represented the No. 1 overall pick in the NFL draft an unprecedented eight times. He also has represented 10 Hall of Famers — Warren Moon, Troy Aikman, Steve Young, Derrick Thomas, Bruce Smith, Thurman Thomas, Kevin Greene, Kenny Easley, Howie Long and Edgerrin James — 62 first-round draft picks and over 150 Pro Bowl clients. In Leigh’s current practice, he partners with Chris Cabott to represent Patrick Mahomes, Aaron Jones, Jayon Brown and many other rising stars.

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