Former Georgia QB Matthew Stafford’s COVID-19 test was ‘false positive’

Tuesday, the Detroit Lions revised their original report that QB Matt Stafford tested positive for COVID-19, details here.

Saturday, the Detroit Lions reported that star quarterback, former Georgia football star Matthew Stafford tested positive for the coronavirus.

However, in a revised report from the Lions on Tuesday, the organization stated that Stafford’s test was a ‘false positive’ and that he was removed from the NFL’s new ‘reserve/ COVID-19 list’.

The Lions had placed Stafford on the NFL’s new ‘reserve/ COVID-19 list’, making him the first starting quarterback to be placed on the list that was created for a player who either tests positive for COVID-19 or who has been quarantined after having been in close contact with an infected person or persons.

If a player falls into either of these categories, their club is required to immediately place the player on the reserve/COVID-19 list. Per agreed upon NFL-NFLPA policy, clubs are not permitted to comment on a player’s medical status other than referring to roster status. Clubs also may not disclose whether the player is in quarantine or is positive for COVID-19.

In Tuesday’s statement, the Lions ensured that Stafford does not have the virus and that he has received multiple negative tests on top of the original ‘false positive’ test.

Today we removed Matthew Stafford from the COVID-IR list and onto the Active Roster. As a result of a False-Positive test result, he was forced due to NFL/NFLPA protocols to sit out until he received two negative tests. His testing sequence for the Pre-Entry period was: negative, negative, False-Positive. The next three tests were all negative. To be clear, Matthew does NOT have COVID-19 and never has had COVID-19 and the test in question was a False-Positive. Also, all of Matthew’s family have been tested and everyone is negative.

In a statement posted on her Instagram account, Kelly Stafford expanded on how her family has dealt with the past week saying it was somewhat of a nightmare situation while blaming the NFL for the ‘false positive’ test.

Kelly concluded her post by saying their family is “absolutely fine and feeling great.”

“We are thankful for all those who called, texted, emailed and showed concern for Matthew and our family.”

 

Kelly Stafford blasts NFL over hubby Matt’s false positive

The wife of Detroit Lions QB Matt Stafford is fuming at the NFL over his false positive for COVID-19

Matt Stafford was declared to have a false positive for COVID-19 Tuesday after supposedly testing positive Saturday. The past four days have been a living hell for his wife, Kelly, and family.

And the Detroit Lions’ QB’s wife let the NFL have it in an Instagram post:

“For 24 hours, we believed my husband was positive for COVID,” Kelly Stafford wrote on Instagram. “We were all tested the day after and we were all negative including Matthew. Then he tested negative again, then again, again, and again.

“I blame the NFL for not holding themselves accountable. These are people’s lives and livelihoods that are in those results in THEIR test sites,” Kelly wrote. “Maybe we should be absolutely positive a person has COVID before releasing that info to the world.”

 

Kelly Stafford said her children were harassed since the news about her husband was made public.

“… Even after we knew it was false positive, our school told us they were not allowed back,” Stafford wrote about her children. “I was approached in a grocery store and told I was ‘endangering others,’ my kids were harassed and kicked off a playground, I was told I needed to wait in my car when trying to pick up food, and people closest to us had to get tested just so they could go back to work.”

Matt Stafford placed on Lions’ Covid-19 reserve list

Former Georgia quarterback Matt Stafford has been placed on the Detroit Lions COVID-19 reserve list. Being placed on this list means Stafford has either tested positive for the virus or has come in close contact with someone who is infected. …

Former Georgia quarterback Matt Stafford has been placed on the Detroit Lions COVID-19 reserve list.

Being placed on this list means Stafford has either tested positive for the virus or has come in close contact with someone who is infected.

Stafford is the eighth Lions player to be placed on this list, joining fellow Bulldog Isaac Nauta.

This news likely does not impact his eligibility next season. Players do, however, have the option to opt out of the upcoming season due to the virus.

Stafford does have four children and a wife who is one-year removed from brain surgery at home. Stafford has not opted out. If he chooses to do so, he has until August 3rd to make that decision.

Vikings QB Kirk Cousins received votes in top quarterback ranking, but didn’t make top 10

ESPN asked more than 50 league executives, coaches, scouts and players to help them rank the best NFL players at 11 different positions. Vikings QB Kirk Cousins received votes, but did not make the top 10 for quarterbacks.

Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins was close to ranking in ESPN’s list of top-10 quarterbacks, but he did not receive enough votes to do so.

ESPN asked more than 50 league executives, coaches, scouts and players to help them rank the top NFL players at 11 different positions. Some voted for Cousins. Here’s what one NFL executive said:

“I like Kirk. Developed into a good quarterback. Better arm than given credit for, and the system suits him perfectly,” via ESPN.

Notably, Aaron Rodgers ranked as the third-best quarterback on the list. Lions quarterback Matt Stafford was No. 10. Although, some around the NFL were critical of Stafford’s body of work:

“What has he really done?” asked multiple execs, referring to his 0-3 playoff record, via ESPN.

I think the biggest surprise, for me, was seeing Lamar Jackson at No. 6. I thought he would for sure be No. 3 at the lowest, and I don’t think I’d rather have Drew Brees on my team than Jackson right now, but Brees ranked fifth.

Lions 2019 rewatch: Week 7 notebook from the loss vs. the Vikings

The Lions get outcoached and outworked by the visiting Vikings, spoiling a career day from Marvin Jones

The Lions enter Week 7 coming off a short and frustrating week after the Week 6 Monday Night Football loss to the Packers. Now 2-2-1, Detroit hosts the division rival Minnesota Vikings. Minnesota is 4-2 and has won its last two games (NYG and PHI) by a combined score of 66-30.

Da’Shawn Hand and Mike Daniels are the only regulars who are inactive for the Lions. The Vikings are not missing any starters due to injury. Bradley Rogers is the referee.

First quarter

Lions get the ball first and it’s nearly a disaster right away. Matthew Stafford’s first pass should have been picked off by Eric Kendricks on a checkdown throw over the middle to Kerryon Johnson. Stafford is not sharp on this drive, missing throws to Marvin Jones and Jesse James. He dodges a bullet with a potential fumble that is overturned and ruled an incomplete pass on a play where the Lions OL fails to pick up blitzing slot CB Mackensie Alexander, who hits Stafford as he’s throwing. Give credit to the defensive scheme here as both LT Taylor Decker and LG Joe Dahl correctly locked up their marks, but nobody else was left available to block Alexander in a 7-man rush. That’s on Stafford.

The drive ends with a punt after a false start penalty on the field goal attempt (on long snapper Don Muhlbach) pushed the ball back farther than coach Patricia was comfortable with for Matt Prater’s attempt. Rather than try a 59-yard attempt, the Lions instead punted.

Detroit’s defense forces a punt on a nice 3rd-down sideline tackle by Tracy Walker, who forces the fumble out of bounds. On that play, the Lions showed eight on the line of scrimmage against a bunch formation but only rushed four. Good coverage on Adam Theilen by Darius Slay on both 2nd and 3rd downs. Jahlani Tavai posted a picture-perfect run fit on Dalvin Cook’s only carry, shedding the FB block and (with Christian Jones) striking and dropping the Vikings RB.

Graham Glasgow executes a fantastic RG pull that stonewalls the LB but K. Johnson cannot make safety Anthony Harris miss in the open field. Perfectly blocked run only gains six. It goes for at least 20 if Johnson can break Harris’ clutching at his calf.

Stafford has quickly identified his mismatch for the day: Marvin Jones vs. Xavier Rhodes on the outside. It’s basically the only viable passing target as neither Kenny Golladay nor Danny Amendola are getting any separation. Amendola cannot shake LB Anthony Barr on a quick slant. Golladay looks very sluggish early on, though he is also being held by Trae Waynes quite a bit.

Nick Bawden whiffs on a block on an edge run on his very first rep. Johnson goes down again on first contact. Stafford goes back to what’s working, finding Jones on the right sideline in the red zone. He puts a wicked spin on Waynes, gets a great seal block from T.J. Hockenson and scampers into the end zone. Prater’s conversion puts the Lions up 7-0.

Walker and A’Shawn Robinson both miss clean tackle-for-loss attempts on Cook’s first run on the next drive. The Vikings eventually score a TD on an absolutely gorgeous play fake by Kirk Cousins rolling into a bootleg to his left. Cousins feathers the ball into a microscopic window just over Quandre Diggs’s leaping and the back of the end zone to Theilen, who had a half-step on Slay but very little room. Legitimately one of the best throws I’ve ever seen.

Mike Ford just misses blocking the extra point, great effort. Tie game at 7-7.

Lions use a 3 TE set to start. Both Logan Thomas and Hockenson quickly lose their blocks and Johnson’s run goes nowhere. I love the quick screen to Jones on 3rd and short but he only gets it because of his own effort. Golladay and James both stood there and watched instead of blocking for him.

Ty Johnson takes over at RB and has some good reps, including a real nice circle route that gets the Lions into the red zone. Stafford bounces a throw to a wide open Hockenson in the back of the end zone on a play that gets negated by defensive holding. Great route, should have been six points.

A very decisive Stafford cashes in with the Jones-on-Rhodes matchup two plays later. Rocket throw, nice catch, a bewildered Rhodes looks for anyone to point a finger at for not helping him. 14-7 Lions.

Great Jarrad Davis blitz forces a scared Cousins to just chuck the ball away on the final play of the quarter. Davis blasted through the line and put two people on the ground on the way to Cousins.

Second quarter

Cousins connects with Diggs on another fantastic throw. Slay is in perfect phase in coverage but is late to recognize the ball. This is a fun matchup. The two respectfully tap one another’s behinds after the play.

The Vikings OTs, Riley Reiff on the left and Brian O’Neill on the right, are winning against the EDGEs, primarily Devon Kennard and Romeo Okwara, on just about every run attempt. It’s very noticeable on this drive. Tavai and Will Harris are missing their run fits and that’s not helping.

Legit defensive penalties on Slay and Coleman (negating a Tracy Walker end zone INT; Patricia challenged the call and lost) set the Vikings up for a too-easy Cousins TD pass to Olabisi Johnson. Nice play scheme by the Vikings sets up some natural picks, something the Lions simply do not utilize in the red zone. We’re tied at 14.

The Vikings learned from the Packers game in Week 6 that the Lions do not throw the ball out of 2TE sets well. Their safety is almost at the line of scrimmage waiting for the run plays every time the Lions have a dual TE on one side of the line. A great Sam Martin punt is the only saving grace of the Lions next possession.

I make the point about the safety usage for MIN because the Vikings are frequently deploying 2TE sets, but the Lions safety (Diggs on this drive but also Harris) don’t even take one step forward from their normal spot to counter the formation. Diggs is actually starting deeper than normal on some of these runs.

Coleman strips Stefon Diggs on a crossing route but the Vikings get lucky and recover the fumble. The next play, Damon Harrison goes down with an injury. He’d been nicely occupying the middle of the field against the run. The next run comes right at the gap and John Atkins is blown aside too easily. Another missed run fit for Tavai, who can’t get off the block. Cook runs almost at will and scores to put the Vikings up 21-14. The right side of the Lions defense (Okwara, Davis, Coleman, Diggs) offers zero resistance on the runs late in the drive.

Golladay finally gets a sniff off play-action down the field. Great blitz pickup by Ty Johnson. In the red zone, Frank Ragnow gets called for a hold on a play where Vikings NT Shamar Stephen is guilty of prolonged hands to the face. The officials give the Lions a terrible make-up call with a mythical roughing the passer against Everson Griffen on the next play. Two plays after that, Anthony Barr–playing a spy role on Stafford with a 3-man rush–gets called for roughing the passer after crashing into the QB when Stafford throws it away because neither Golladay nor Amendola can get an inch of separation.

Stafford correctly finds the best matchup with Jones isolated on backup CB Mike Hughes and the quick-strike TD ties the game at 21 on the last play of the quarter. Great catch by Jones, who has been the best player on the field so far for either team. Fun first half of offensive football for both teams.

Analyst thinks Matt Stafford can be 2020’s NFL passing leader

Can Georgia football great Matthew Stafford, now with the Detroit Lions, lead the NFL in passing yards in 2020? One NFL analyst thinks so.

NFL.com contributing columnist Adam Schein released nine ‘bold predictions’ for the 2020 NFL season and is high on Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford.

Schein used one of his predictions to state that Stafford will lead the NFL in passing yards this year.

He writes:

“It’s Year 2 in Darrell Bevell’s offense, an attack that suited Stafford quite well last fall. Detroit has a fine trio of receivers in Kenny Golladay, Marvin Jones and Danny Amendola, and I think T.J. Hockenson can enjoy a breakout sophomore campaign with better health. Rookie RB D’Andre Swift was a steal in Round 2, and he’s a legit weapon in the passing game. Detroit still has issues on defense, meaning Stafford is going to be called upon to throw the ball a lot.”

It’s not too crazy to think that Stafford can do this. He’s never done it before, but he’s consistently right near the top of NFL passing leaders and already ranks 18th all-time in career passing yards.

Stafford played in eight games last year before missing the second half of the season with a back injury. But before he got injured, he was playing at an MVP caliber level. He had thrown for 2,500 yards through eight games, meaning he was on pace for a 5,000 yard season. If he kept up that pace he would have competed with Jamies Winston for the 2019 passing title. Winston finished first with 5,109 yards.

Stafford will have plenty of weapons around him in 2020, but thanks to what’s likely going to be yet another weak defense, the Lions should find themselves playing from behind quite often. That just means more yards for Stafford.

Trey Flowers: ‘we’ve got to get out there’ once allowed

Lions DE Trey Flowers isn’t afraid of the risks of coronavirus enough to keep him off the playing field

Trey Flowers joined a conference call with local reporters on Wednesday. He wasn’t local, however; Flowers was at his home in Alabama instead of being in Detroit working out with teammates in the Lions offseason activities. Such is life in the time of COVID-19.

The Lions defensive end was asked about if he had any worries about getting back on the field once the NFL and NFLPA give the go-ahead. Flowers didn’t hesitate one bit.

“If they give the OK of playing football, we’ve got to go out there,” Flowers said. “I’m not one that plays with fear because you’re out there risking your life anyway just running into guys, risking injury, risking a lot of things. … If they give us the OK, I wouldn’t have any concerns or any hesitation about going out there wondering if it’s safe or not. We play a dangerous game already.”

Flowers sees no issue with taking proper precautions to protect the players from coronavirus, however. He trusts the NFLPA leadership and the league to make those correct decisions.

“But I feel as though there has to be a lot of precautionary measures in place. I feel as though the NFL, the NFLPA can kind of figure that out about what it needs to be a safe environment for the players.”

Some NFL teams have been able to open up facilities to a limited number of players and staffers. The Lions are prevented from doing so by Michigan’s quarantine restrictions.

Flowers echoes the sentiment from quarterback Matthew Stafford, who told reporters a week earlier in his own Zoom call,

“If they told us we had to start the season tomorrow and I had to fly to Detroit and put the pads on, I’d be happy to go do it.”

 

Georgia Bulldogs on the Lions: Matthew Stafford talks D’Andre Swift addition

Georgia football great Matthew Stafford and D’Andre Swift have teamed up on the Detroit Lions, and the former UGA QB is excited about it.

Matthew Stafford is excited to play with fellow Georgia Bulldog D’Andre Swift on the Detroit Lions this year.

Detroit used its second round pick to take Swift, and Stafford cannot wait to see what he will do in the Lions’ offense.

“As a player goes, he’s a back that can kind of do it all,” Stafford said of Swift in a Zoom call, per detroitlions.com’s Tim Twentyman. “I think he does a good job out of the backfield catching the ball and making big plays. They handed it to him a bunch and he was doing a great job running with it.”

Stafford, who played for Georgia from 2006-08 before becoming the No. 1 overall pick in the 2009 draft, knows what Swift is capable of. The two have already trained together as members of the same franchise along with another Dawg on the Lions, tight end Isaac Nauta.

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Swift joins a running back room that includes former Auburn ball carrier Kerryon Johnson and Alabama’s Bo Scarbrough. That’s some pretty legit SEC talent in the Lions’ backfield.

“I think it’s huge,” Stafford said of the Lions adding Swift to their backfield. “In the NFL everybody, but especially running backs, get dinged up and beat up here and there throughout a season, and really throughout games. The more guys you can have back there that can carry the rock and do a good job for you the better off you’re going to be.”

Detroit Lions QB Matthew Stafford puts Michigan home up for sale

Former Georgia football star and current Detroit Lions QB Matthew Stafford recently listed his Michigan home for sale worth $6.5m.

Detroit Lions veteran QB Matthew Stafford recently listed his $6.5 million Michigan home for sale. The home was rumored to be on the market this off-season, but it seems it has only been listed for the last day or so.

Stafford was drafted by the Lions in the 2009 NFL Draft with the No. 1 pick. Now in his 12th season, the former Georgia star is the most prolific passer in Detroit Lions history with over 41,000 yards through the air.

Trade speculation is usually high on the list when a tenured quarterback puts his home up for sale, but this isn’t exactly the case with the Stafford family. Matthew and his wife, Kelly Stafford, have three daughters and are expecting a fourth child soon. So it’s fair to guess that the reason they are selling their current home is so they can move into a more kid-friendly one. They moved into this house in 2013, before they had any children.

Kelly confirmed that when she said on her Instagram that the reason for the move is to find a home that is more suitable for their young girls rather than a house with a pool and a lake.

 

2020 Fantasy Strength of Schedule: Passing

2020 fantasy strength of schedule for Passing

Over the 24 years since The Huddle originated strength of schedule analysis from a fantasy perspective, there have been tweaks along the way to improve accuracy and to minimize the spikes, flukes, and aberrations that result from the variable-rich environment of the NFL.

This year, quarterback rushing is not included. I am only totaling passing yardage and scores. There is a mountain of difference between playing against Lamar Jackson and any non-rushing quarterback and that impacts fantasy points allowed.

If your fantasy starter also runs the ball, all the better. The average passing fantasy points allowed per venue is at the bottom of this page for reference. Only the first 16 weeks were considered in all analyses to follow.

Total Points

For fantasy contests and some leagues, only total points matter so below are the total points for each passing offense derived from their schedule against the averages allowed in 2019 by those defenses.

Weekly Play

Three different views are below. Week 1 to 16 is the full season fantasy strength of schedule. “The Dorey Rule” says to draft like the season only lasted the first six weeks for a hot start. Finally, Weeks 14 to 16 represent the most common fantasy playoff weeks. “Good” games were when they faced one of the top 22 venues from last year; “Bad” was when they played in one of the worst 22. The middle 20 matchups were neither good nor bad.

Notable schedules

Mitchell Trubisky/Nick Foles (CHI) – The reality is that the Bears had one of the better schedules last year and Trubisky did not take advantage. Now there’s no certainty which quarterback will start. Maybe if Foles overtakes Trubisky on the depth chart…

Matthew Stafford (DET) – He was on a path for a 5,000-yard season in 2019 but missed the final eight weeks. Now he’s back with one of the best schedules in the NFL. A mature offense and new weapon with D’Andre Swift goes against the AFC South and NFC South and that could allow Stafford to surprise.

Philip Rivers (IND) – Playing in Pittsburgh in Week 16 won’t help, but Rivers steers the Colts through the first ten weeks with only one matchup in a tougher venue. Fantasy leaguers usually downgrade players changing teams but this schedule says Rivers remains relevant.

Teddy Bridgewater (CAR) – The schedule is kinder than most though there’s a ton of change going on with the Panthers, let alone relying on a new quarterback.

Ryan Fitzpatrick/Tua Tagovailoa (MIA) –

Ryan Tannehill (TEN) –

Kyler Murray (ARI) –

2020 weekly grid

 

Best and worst venues to play

Fantasy values were derived from 1 point per 20 pass yards and four-point passing touchdowns.