Lions’ Kenny Golladay and T.J. Hockenson confirm positive COVID-19 test result

Detroit Lions’ Kenny Golladay and T.J. Hockenson both confirm they tested positive for COVID-19 at beginning of training camp.

Detroit Lions’ wide receiver Kenny Golladay and tight end T.J. Hockenson both confirmed today via video conference that they indeed tested positive for COVID-19 at beginning of training camp.

Based on the length of time missed, this isn’t overly surprising news but they did have two different experiences dealing with the test results.

Golladay was flagged for a positive test on the first day of camp, July 29th, and remained out until August 5th. He acknowledged that he had “a few symptoms. Just like a fever, that’s it. Lasted like two days, nothing major.” And he made sure to reiterate that he currently was “100-percent and happy to be on the field right now, and that’s all that matters.”

Hockenson was also flagged on the 29th of July but he remained on the reserve/COVID-19 list until August 8th, despite being asymptomatic. He admitted he was caught off guard by the test results and tried to make the most of his alone time.

“Pretty lonely,” Hockenson said. “There wasn’t a whole lot going on. I, fortunately, didn’t have any symptoms. It was kind of a surprise to test positive for that. And then to spend a week away from the teammates was tough. But, it was a week for me to get mentally prepared for camp, and actually my father brought a bunch of weights up and I was able to do some things in the garage, while I was doing that.”

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Hockenson would go on to describe the seriousness of testing positive and what he learned from it.

“I think it’s something that a lot of the community, people my age, don’t take as seriously as they should,” Hockenson continued. “It’s one of those things that you need to do the right things, and you need to be quarantined if you have it, and all those steps that they give us. It was something that I learned, that I didn’t want to give it to anybody. My teammates, my family. You just don’t want to put anybody at risk, because you know how deadly it was no matter if I had symptoms or not.”

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Gators News: July 28, 2020

It has not been a great first week for the league and if things don’t shape up soon, we could very well see baseball shut back down again. 

As we wade deeper into another week the ramifications of the COVID-19 pandemic are becoming murkier and murkier as Major League Baseball battles through the first significant test of its restarted season.

The news coming out of the weekend was that multiple members of the Miami Marlins baseball squad, including both players and staff, tested positive for the novel coronavirus yet still took the field against the Philadelphia Phillies on Sunday, only to have its next two games canceled.

The good news is that so far, no member of the Phillies’ club has tested positive… yet. The bad news is that there has not been a sufficient incubation period for the virus to show up for contact over the past couple of days, making the results a bit less encouraging. Additionally, four more Marlins tested positive over the past 24 hours, bringing the grand total to 17 among Miami’s baseball personnel.

The word from the nation’s top infection disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci? This outbreak could spell doom for the MLB season, but does not necessarily mean the games must be stopped now.

“This could put it in danger. I don’t believe they need to stop, but we just need to follow this and see what happens with other teams on a day-by-day basis.”

It has not been a great first week for the league and if things don’t shape up soon, we could very well see baseball shut back down again.

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Gators News: July 9, 2020

The number of positive coronavirus cases continues to increase steeply leaving the nation and sports wondering how to move forward.

As we head into the downslope of another week, the number of positive coronavirus cases continues to increase steeply, leaving the nation — much less the sports world — wondering how to take its next steps forward.

Yesterday, the Ivy League announced that it will cancel all fall sports and will not resume athletics no sooner than January 1, 2021. The decision affects football as well as men’s and women’s soccer, men’s and women’s cross country, and women’s field hockey and volleyball. Stanford also announced that it is cutting 11 of its 36 varsity sports programs, including field hockey, wrestling and men’s volleyball.

Additionally, Ohio State decided to hit the pause switch on all voluntary workouts after an unconfirmed number of athletes tested positive for COVID-19; the exact number was not released in order to protect the identity of those infected.

Here is the rest of our stories from yesterday.

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It’s great to be a Florida Gator!

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Tom Dempsey among important players in Saints history impacted by the coronavirus

The New Orleans Saints family has been hit hard by the novel coronavirus, with legendary kicker Tom Dempsey recently testing positive.

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The novel coronavirus has spread rapidly throughout the nation, hitting vulnerable populations like the elderly harder than most. That group includes big figures in New Orleans Saints lore such as the legendary Tom Dempsey, whose NFL-record 63-yard field goal at the old Tulane Stadium stood for 43 years. On Monday, the Times-Picayune’s Ramon Antonio Vargas reported that Dempsey tested positive for the coronavirus.

Dempsey, 73, has been a resident of the New Orleans-based Lambeth House Retirement Community, one of many nursing homes battling coronavirus infections. Because he is battling both Alzheimer’s and dementia, his family and the Tulane University Medical Center (which tested him for the coronavirus) agreed that he should continue to stay at Lambeth House.

Vargas added that Dempsey’s family reports he has so far dealt with just mild symptoms of the coronavirus, and that he has responded well to initial treatment. Still, it’s a very serious situation, which the families of other former Saints players can speak to.

Bobby Hebert Jr. lost his father, Bobby Hebert Sr., after testing positive for the coronavirus. Hebert Jr. played for both the Saints and the Atlanta Falcons during his 11-year NFL career and currently works as an analyst for WWL Radio in New Orleans.

Saints coach Sean Payton said last week that he was clear of infection after previously testing positive himself, though he’s remaining careful to stay at home during this public health crisis. With greater availability of testing raising the total number of cases daily, it feels like it’s only a matter of time until more members of the Saints family are affected by the coronavirus.

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