Former Alabama DT Daron Payne placed on NFL Reserve/COVID-19 list

Daron Payne has been placed on the NFL’s Reserve/COVID-19 list.

Former Alabama defensive tackle Daron Payne is set to enter his fourth season in the NFL with the Washington Football Team. The No. 13 overall pick from the 2018 draft has had quite a big impact on Washington’s defense, which is expected to perform as one of the league’s best in 2021.

While the team’s defense is highly praised, the vaccination rate among players has been the recent target go criticism.

Recent reports suggest Washington is far below the rest of the league in terms of percentage of team members vaccinated.

Ron Rivera, the team’s head coach, recently overcame a hard-fought battle against skin cancer, and has been outspoken regarding his frustration with the team’s hesitancy to be vaccinated.

It’s unclear whether Payne was one of those players, nor is it known if he has contracted the virus or simply been near someone who has tested positive. Regardless, Payne has been placed on the NFL’s Reserve/COVID-19 list, according to the team’s official Twitter.

Roll Tide Wire will continue to report on Payne and his likelihood to return to training camp.

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion.

OL Patrick Omameh reunites with Saints after being waived by Raiders

The New Orleans Saints reunited with journeyman backup offensive guard/tackle Patrick Omameh after he was waived by the Las Vegas Raiders.

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The New Orleans Saints offensive line added a new face this week, with former backup guard/tackle Patrick Omameh joining the team off of waivers. He was recently waived by the Las Vegas Raiders, and the Saints were quick to file a claim for him, per the NFL daily transactions wire.

Omameh, who turns 31 on Dec. 29, has appeared in 6 games for the Raiders this season — though primarily on special teams, where he saw 29 snaps (compared to just 17 snaps with the Las Vegas offense). He took the field for 15 games with the Saints last season, including the playoffs, totaling 156 snaps and including a critical short-notice start at left tackle on Thanksgiving Day against the Atlanta Falcons.

His return is timely. The Saints lost right guard Nick Easton to his second concussion of the season (a previous brain injury sidelined him for three weeks in October), and left tackle Terron Armstead looked a little rusty coming off the COVID-19 reserve list in last week’s game with the Philadelphia Eagles, when he allowed a season-high 4 quarterback pressures.

But don’t expect Omameh to get on the practice field soon. He has to pass through several days of COVID-19 testing after changing teams, just like other Saints pickups like linebacker Kwon Alexander. It’s another unusual hurdle for players to deal with in 2020.

When he is cleared to join his teammates, Omameh should slot right into the depth chart like he never left. He re-signed with New Orleans as a free agent early this year and was with the team throughout training camp, signing with the Raiders after they released him in final roster cuts. He should help reinforce the interior rotation behind rookie guard Cesar Ruiz until Easton turns in a clean bill of health.


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Seahawks WR Josh Gordon clears COVID-19 protocol, now in building

Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Josh Gordon has cleared the COVID-19 protocol and can now enter the team’s building.

Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Josh Gordon was conditionally reinstated from his suspension for violating the league’s policies on substances of abuse and performance-enhancing drugs last week but that doesn’t mean he’s immediately eligible to get to full work with his teammates. But, he is now at the Virginia Mason Athletic Center in Renton.

“Josh is in the building today for the first time, and it’ll take a while before he can get active on in the practice and all that kind of stuff, but we’re going through the process,” coach Pete Carroll told reporters Wednesday during his press conference.

There remain a number of hoops Gordon and Seattle must jump through in order to get the wide receiver able to participate in full. For now, he’ll work out with trainers, attend team meetings and focus on getting up to speed.

“What I’ve talked to Josh about is it’s really important that he really bust it right now so that when he does get out, there’s not a lag time of him adapting,” Carroll explained. “He’s got to get it done now – there’s just not much time left, so he’s going to work really hard with our guys to make sure he’s running full speed, top speed as long as he can before he ever gets on the field so that he can maintain it once we get going, because we expect to give him a chance to help us when he’s available.”

Gordon is eligible to return to practice after Week 15 and can first appear in Week 16’s game against the Rams.

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Report: NFL considering ‘significant discipline’ for Saints after postgame celebration

The NFL is considering penalties for the New Orleans Saints after a postgame celebration in their locker room, a breach of COVID-19 protocol

Here’s your weekly Sunday morning splash report: ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports that the New Orleans Saints are facing harsh penalties from the league for breaches of COVID-19 protocol after Week 9’s blowout win against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, in which Saints coach Sean Payton joined his players for a brief celebration before showering and changing minutes after the game.

Per Schefter’s report — which follows days of dialogue between the league office and the Saints legal team — the bigger issue is that the Saints would be considered repeat offenders, similarly to the Las Vegas Raiders. Both teams and their head coaches were fined after failing to properly wear face coverings during their Week 2 prime-time game, but the similarities in their offenses fall apart after about two minutes’ consideration.

The second break in protocol for the Raiders was the admittance of a non-credentialed employee to their locker room following Week 2’s win over the Saints. Additionally, the NFL went after the Raiders for repeated breaches of protocol, including a charity fundraiser appearance by ten players in which none of them wore masks, and for right tackle Trent Brown’s failure to wear contact tracing devices at the team facility.

Brown later tested positive for COVID-19, forcing the other four starting offensive linemen to self-quarantine out of an abundance of caution. It resulted in a Raiders-Buccaneers game getting flexed out of Sunday night’s time slot to accommodate the losses, and substantial penalties to the Raiders organization: $500,000 in fines and a loss of a 2021 sixth-round draft pick.

To be clear: what the Saints have done doesn’t compare to this. Not even a little bit. To suggest as much would be an awful false equivalence. The Raiders were negligent inside and outside their home facility, breaching the “mini-bubble” of the locker room, and they’ve rightfully had the hammer drop down on them. They’ve also been without several players as they recover from infection, directly caused by that negligence.

The Saints have had two positive cases all season: backup running back Dwayne Washington spent nearly three weeks on the reserve list to start the season, and wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders missed two weeks after catching COVID-19 at home. Neither situation resulted in an outbreak like what the Raiders and other teams (like the Tennessee Titans, who gathered for practices away from the facility when it was closed because of infections) have experienced.

Saints owner Gayle Benson has rented out entire hotels for the team to isolate themselves in during road games, including this visit to Tampa Bay, and they’ve chartered private flights on oversized aircraft to allow for more social distancing in transit. They’ve taken this more seriously than most, and a few minutes of dancing and shouting in celebration — after hours of playing a high-contact sport — doesn’t change that.

And, yeah: the Saints weren’t the only team to celebrate like this recently. The Denver Broncos, Kansas City Chiefs, Buffalo Bills, Pittsburgh Steelers, and Detroit Lions have all shared videos of shenanigans exactly mirroring what the Saints have done. If the NFL is going to point to the Raiders’ serious offenses as enough precedent to dock future draft picks and cash from the Saints, they’ll be doing so off of a very, very flimsy argument. But when has the league office made an example out of the Saints before?

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LSU’s updated COVID-19 protocols are nothing short of a joke

Louisiana State University released its COVID-19 protocols on Monday for upcoming football games after a review of previous policies, as reported by The Athletic’s LSU beat reporter Brody Miller on Twitter. Both of the changes mentioned are rather …

Louisiana State University released its COVID-19 protocols on Monday for upcoming football games after a review of previous policies, as reported by The Athletic’s LSU beat reporter Brody Miller on Twitter.

Both of the changes mentioned are rather startling given that there is still an active pandemic that has interrupted both collegiate and professional sports, but hubris is strong in the Southeastern Conference.

First of all, there will be no CDC wellness checks when entering Tiger Stadium, with the intent to speed entry and reduce the build-up in lines. While this particular change is not egregious on the surface, we have not yet reached a stage in the pandemic where we should be letting our guard down.

Secondly, LSU is permitting alcohol to be sold at the game, for which there is really no good explanation. The reduction in inhibitions that alcohol intoxication cause is the exact opposite of the vigilance that is needed to steer through this autumn’s season; if the fans cannot enjoy the game without booze, then perhaps there is another problem that needs to be confronted as well.

Coronavirus infection numbers have been in decline and much should be credited to those who have obeyed social distancing and mask-wearing orders. Moves like LSU’s only serve to taunt fate and do nothing positive for the fanbase or the sport as a whole.

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Saints activate RB Dwayne Washington after 18 days on COVID-19 reserve

The New Orleans Saints welcomed running back Dwayne Washington back to practice after an 18-day absence on the NFL’s COVID-19 reserve list.

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The New Orleans Saints activated running back Dwayne Washington from the NFL’s COVID-19 reserve list on Thursday, 18 days after he was first sidelined per league protocol. He was the fourth Saints player to land on the list since training camp opened in late July, but each of his teammates returned to work after a day or two, writing the experience off as false positive test results.

That wasn’t the case for Washington, who missed the rest of camp and the first regular season game. Teams keep test results confidential so there’s no way of knowing for sure, but the lengthy absence for Washington would suggest he contracted the coronavirus. And thankfully, it appears he’s made a full recovery.

Washington returned to practice with the Saints on Thursday, and he could very well suit up for Monday’s kickoff with the Las Vegas Raiders. He was a core special teamer last season — only cornerback Justin Hardee and linebacker Craig Robertson played more snaps in the game’s third phase — but it remains to be seen how large of a role he’ll see on offense. Washington saw just 18 snaps there in 2019, buried beneath Alvin Kamara and Latavius Murray on the depth chart.

Now he has to contend with training camp breakout Ty Montgomery, who got in on four snaps with the Saints offense in their 2020 season opener. Montgomery also placed third in New Orleans for special teams snaps played (behind Hardee and Robertson) against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, so maybe he and Washington can coexist.

And the Saints will not have to waive a player to make room for Washington on their 53-man roster. They never replaced rookie punter Blake Gillikin after he landed on injured reserve last week, so a spot was kept open for Washington once he was cleared to return. But the Saints do have an open vacancy on their 16-strong practice squad after linebacker Anthony Chickillo left for an opportunity on the Denver Broncos active roster, so some movement should be expected.

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Saints to activate linebacker Kaden Elliss from reserve/COVID-19

New Orleans Saints linebacker Kaden Elliss is set to be activated from the reserve/COVID-19 list after twice testing negative for infection.

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It turned out to be a short stay on reserve/COVID-19 for New Orleans Saints linebacker Kaden Elliss, who was designated to the reserve list Thursday. NewOrleans.Football’s Nick Underhill reported that the Saints will remove Elliss from the list after twice testing negative for COVID-19, which was confirmed by Amie Just of The Times-Picayune/Advocate. It suggests that the initial test result to put Elliss in the NFL’s COVID-19 protocol may have been a false-positive, but the real takeaway is that Elliss was fortunate to escape a serious infection.

That’s great news for the second-year pro out of Idaho, who was picked by the Saints late in the 2019 NFL Draft. Elliss initially showed out on special teams in training camp last summer before working his way into the linebacker rotation, splitting time with Kiko Alonso as the team’s third linebacker in base sets (starters Demario Davis and A.J. Klein rarely left the field). An unfortunate knee injury in Week 3’s road win over the Seattle Seahawks ended his rookie season, but he’s back now and looking to carve out a larger role for himself.

And his help couldn’t arrive at a better time. Including Elliss, the Saints have just four linebackers under contract past the 2020 season; former practice squad call-up Andrew Dowell and rookies Zack Baun and Joe Bachie round out the group. If any of them can impress enough to earn starter’s reps this year, they could become a big asset to the team in years to come.

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Gators News: August 7, 2020

Another week is nearly in the books on this Friday, with the number of sports returning to action growing as we race towards fall. 

Another week is nearly in the books on this Friday, with the number of sports returning to action growing as we race towards fall.

The Amway Coaches Poll powered by USA TODAY Sports was released yesterday, with the Gators starting the season in the exact same spot is began in 2019 and ended at the conclusion of last season.

In other news, the Southeastern Conference announced its initial COVID-19 medical protocols for the upcoming SEC-only schedule set to kick off on Sept. 12. Here is the rest from around the Gator Nation.

Around the Swamp

It’s great to be a Florida Gator!

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