Chiefs’ L’Jarius Sneed must pass these concussion protocols to play Super Bowl LVII

#Chiefs CB L’Jarius Sneed must pass through these five steps to return from his concussion and play against the #Eagles in Super Bowl LVII.

Kansas City Chiefs starting CB L’Jarius Sneed suffered a concussion during the opening defensive snaps of the AFC Championship Game against the Cincinnati Bengals. The team managed to win the game without him on the field, but they’re hopeful that he can return to play for Super Bowl LVII against the Philadelphia Eagles.

Sneed went through stretches and warm-ups during the portion of Thursday’s practice open to members of the media. Find photographic evidence from the KC Star’s Jesse Newell down below:

This suggests that Sneed is progressing through the league’s concussion protocol, strengthening his chances to play in the Super Bowl. What does Sneed need to accomplish in order to be cleared from the NFL’s concussion protocol and play in the Super Bowl on Feb. 12?

There are five steps that he’ll need to go through as part of the NFL’s return-to-participation protocols. The goal of all of these five phases is to ensure that Sneed’s neurocognitive state returns to baseline functionality, at which point he could return to play. After he goes through these five steps, an INC (Independent Neurotrauma Consultant) will also have to clear him for play.

Remember, the NFL’s return-to-participation protocol lede states that every concussion is unique. That means there is no set timetable for Sneed’s return. He’ll progress through the league’s protocols at the pace necessary.

Let’s take a look at each of the five phases and what they entail for Sneed as the team gets ready for the Super Bowl:

Chiefs S Tyrann Mathieu returns to practice on Thursday

#Chiefs S Tyrann Mathieu was spotted at practice during the portion open to the media which tells us he’s making progress in the NFL’s concussion protocols.

Kansas City Chiefs HC Andy Reid suggested on Wednesday that Tyrann Mathieu could return to practice on Thursday if everything went according to plan. Well, it looks like things went according to plan.

During the portion of Thursday’s practice open to the media, numerous reporters spotted Mathieu back on the field with a helmet. The veteran safety was knocked out of the divisional-round game against the Buffalo Bills and placed in the NFL’s concussion protocol.

Mathieu’s return to practice doesn’t necessarily suggest that he has cleared the NFL’s return-to-play protocols. It does mean, however, that he is progressing through the protocols. The fact that he’s practicing is a good sign that he’ll have a chance to play on Sunday in the AFC championship game against the Cincinnati Bengals. The key today will be for him to make it through a full or limited practice without recurrence of symptoms.

Here are some tweets, pictures and videos about his return to work from members of the local beat:

Mathieu’s return to action will be important for the Chiefs and its secondary. He’s the leader of that position group and does a lot of work to make sure they’re lined up properly and at their best on any given week. Against a high-powered receiver corps that features Ja’Marr Chase, Tee Higgins and Tyler Boyd, Kansas City will need Mathieu on the field to ensure they’re ready for the challenge.

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Malcolm Jenkins and Juwan Johnson cleared from COVID-19 protocols

Some reinforcements are on the way: Malcolm Jenkins and Juwan Johnson have been cleared from COVID-19 protocols

Some reinforcements are on the way for the New Orleans Saints: starting safety Malcolm Jenkins and backup tight end Juwan Johnson have both been cleared from the COVID-19 reserve list, per Tuesday’s update to the daily NFL transactions wire.

And more help could be on the way ahead of Sunday’s Week 17 game with the Carolina Panthers after the NFL and NFLPA adjusted their protocols to reflect the latest guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Asymptomatic individuals may now return to work after five days, not ten, regardless of vaccination status.

That’s big news for a Saints team that lost to the Miami Dolphins on Monday night in part because of an outbreak that sidelined nearly two dozen players, including their top two quarterbacks and all three starting linebackers, plus an important on-field leader in Jenkins.

It’s frustrating that this change was initiated after the Saints-Dolphins game, but it honestly wouldn’t have made much of a difference for New Orleans. Only two players entered COVID protocols prior to that five-day window which would have allowed them to play, in Johnson and tight end Adam Trautman. All of the other Saints players on the list missed the cut and wouldn’t have cleared protocol in enough time to play on Dec. 27, including Jenkins.

Fortunately they should have ample time to get right in time for Jan. 2’s matchup with Carolina. And with a playoffs berth still within reach, New Orleans needs all the help it can get.

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Report: Trevor Siemian the latest Saints player entering COVID-19 protocols

Report: Trevor Siemian the latest Saints player entering COVID-19 protocols, Ian Book to back up Taysom Hill

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This is what we were worried about when the New Orleans Saints began adding players to the COVID-19 reserve list earlier this week. An outbreak of cases sweeping across the NFL has touched New Orleans, with the Times-Picayune | Advocate’s Jeff Duncan reporting that Saints backup quarterback Trevor Siemian is expected to enter league COVID-19 protocols and be unavailable for Monday night’s game with the Miami Dolphins.

That follows the earlier placements of tight ends Juwan Johnson and Adam Trautman on the COVID-19 reserve list, leaving just two tight ends available for the Dolphins game (Nick Vannett on the 53-man roster and Ethan Wolf on the practice squad). It’s a bad time to be shorthanded.

If Siemian is also sidelined, it leaves New Orleans with only one healthy quarterback behind Taysom Hill: rookie draft pick Ian Book, who hasn’t played a down this season. He’s been inactive for all but two games in Weeks 9 and 10. It’s too late in the game to add another passer, so there’s a non-zero chance we see Book hit the field if Hill misses time while managing a couple of different injuries.

But Duncan’s report adds that other Saints players could land on the COVID-19 reserve list, too. It’s something to keep an eye out for in the days leading up to kickoff with Miami.

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Cameron Jordan, Ty Montgomery activated from COVID-19 reserve list

Saints’ Cameron Jordan, Ty Montgomery activated from COVID-19 reserve

They’re back: the New Orleans Saints activated defensive end Cameron Jordan and wide receiver Ty Montgomery from the COVID-19 reserve list, per Thursday’s update to the daily NFL transactions wire. That leaves running back Mark Ingram as the only player still in league COVID-19 protocols — fingers crossed he returns soon while no other teammates join him.

Jordan’s return, specifically, is a big boost for a Saints defensive line that could use all the help it can get. He returns just in time to face Tom Brady and the heavily-favored Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday night. And while Jordan has seen some regression over the last two years as a decade-long streak of starts begins to weigh on him, he’s been a big factor in New Orleans’ success against Brady.

As a team the Saints have sacked Brady 12 times and intercepted him 7 times, also forcing a pair of fumbles, in four meetings since he landed in the NFC South last season. He’s thrown 8 touchdown passes and run for another in that span but gone 1-3 against New Orleans. Whatever the formula to beating Brady is, the Saints have been able to find it. Getting Jordan back in the lineup should do a lot to help them chase it one more time.

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Mike Tomlin: NFL notified Steelers about locker room TikTok dance

The NFL has taken notice of the Pittsburgh Steelers’ maskless, viral TikTok dance, meaning they could join the Saints in losing a draft pick

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The Pittsburgh Steelers clinched the AFC North in dramatic fashion, overcoming a 24-7 second half deficit to upset the Indianapolis Colts in their 28-24 victory. Such a big win prompted players to celebrate in the locker room, and videos of their dancing and merrymaking spread quickly across social media.

It recalls a similar incident earlier this year when the New Orleans Saints were smacked with $500,000 in fines and the loss of their seventh-round pick in the 2021 draft. Videos of Saints players and coach Sean Payton’s jubilant, maskless gathering circulated widely online, though they’ve taken great precautions since to abide by the NFL’s new rules amid a pandemic.

And the league office took notice of the COVID-19 violations in Pittsburgh, which Steelers coach Mike Tomlin confirmed on Tuesday.

“It is a continual education process in terms of making sure that our guys understand how important it is that we adhere to the protocols of the pandemic,” Tomlin told ESPN’s Brooke Pryor. “That being said, sometimes the education is punitive in nature and that’s just the reality of it.”

Like the Saints, the Steelers would be interpreted as repeat offenders against the NFL’s COVID-19 policies. New Orleans and Payton were each fined heavily early this season for failing to toe the line, as were Tomlin and the Steelers organization, who lost a combined $350,000 in November. So it’s possible that Pittsburgh could also forfeit a 2021 draft pick in addition to the cash fines.

These are dramatic losses for teams to suffer, but at least the NFL appears to be taking an even-handed approach (even if details on what specific penalties the Steelers may be facing are not yet available). The league has come too far to afford a slip-up in protocol this late in the season.

With the playoffs just weeks away, a possible outbreak couldn’t appear at a worse time, risking the entire tournament’s structure. So expect the league and its teams to step up their already-intense measures as the stakes continue to heighten.


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News: Cowboys staff enters bubble, Colombo fired in NY, Emmitt’s salute to service

Also, the Cowboys get two off the Reserve/COVID list, and DeMarcus Lawrence promises a better showing than the team gave a month ago.

COVID-19 dominates the Cowboys’ headlines just days before their Week 11 trip to Minnesota. Just as two players come off the virus watch list, the Dallas coaching staff takes up residence in the posh hotel next to the team’s headquarters. This comes as the league announces that all teams will operate under stricter protocols for the rest of 2020. But those measures only help player and coach safety; now eight fans who have tested positive report that they had recently been in attendance at AT&T Stadium for Cowboys home games. Uncertain times indeed as the league heads into the home stretch of this surreal season.

On the field, DeMarcus Lawrence is promising better things than the team showed even last month. The Cowboys’ injury report shows only two players not participating in the Wednesday session, and Chidobe Awuzie is set to finally make his anticipated return to action. A former Cowboy gets his pink slip from Big Blue, a team icon reaches out to salute a retired serviceman, and there’s still a decent chance that the 2-7 Cowboys could be leading the NFC East in less than two weeks’ time. Here’s the News and Notes.

Sean Payton fined $100,000 for not keeping his mask up on Saints sideline

The NFL fined New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton $100,000 and issued an $250,000 fine to the team for not following COVID-19 procedures.

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As anyone who has worn a face mask in public during the COVID-19 pandemic knows, it’s hard to talk behind that thing. But it’s no excuse to not wear one, especially in the workplace. And the NFL reminded New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton of that with a hefty fine after he didn’t keep his mask up during a Week 2 game against the Las Vegas Raiders.

NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reported that Payton was fined $100,000 for his negligence, with the Saints organization receiving a $250,000 penalty (all fines are paid into the NFL General Fund). Raiders coach Jon Gruden and his team were hit with the same fines for the same problem, joining a list of other NFL coaches who had been penalized for not following protocols around the league.

Payton did take the field wearing a neck gaiter, which he lowered from across his nose and mouth as the game wore on. While Payton has already contracted the novel coronavirus and recovered earlier this year (repeat infections are rare), if nothing else it’s bad for optics to have the leader of an organization not following procedure.

But while it is important for the NFL to emphasize everyone follow the rules during a public health crisis, it feels disingenuous to bring the hammer down on coaches working games when the Dallas Cowboys just crammed more than 21,000 fans into AT&T Stadium, many of whom were neither wearing masks nor social distancing. It feels like a situation where the NFL wants to have it both ways.

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Jerry Jones says Cowboys will play in front of fans at AT&T in 2020

The Cowboys owner believes AT&T Stadium is uniquely designed to accommodate more live fans this year than many other facilities in the NFL.

The list of NFL teams capping or outright cutting fan attendance for 2020 home games is growing by the day. But don’t expect the Dallas Cowboys to put themselves on that list anytime soon. At least, not if team owner Jerry Jones has anything to say about it.

As usual, Jones had plenty to say- about a wide range of topics- during Wednesday’s press conference to open training camp. Clearly, though, one of his main points of emphasis for the reporters assembled via videochat was attendance at AT&T Stadium for the club’s eight upcoming home games.

“The Dallas Cowboys plan on playing all of our football games,” Jones stressed, “and we plan on playing them in front of our fans.”

He said it twice. In the first nine minutes of the press conference. Just so there would be no misunderstanding.

But beyond vowing that there would be fans in the stands, Jones declined to go any further by giving a number or percentage.

“I don’t have an expectation,” Jones said. “As you know, you’re dealing with a little bit of a moving target, and I’m not trying to diminish the moving target aspect of it. But we’re very unique in that we have the suite capacities that we have out there that give us some extra control.”

The NFL has already ordered that, at any stadiums that are open this season, the bottom several rows of seats be tarped off to keep players, coaches, and sideline personnel safely distanced from fans. For AT&T Stadium in Arlington, that mandate almost assuredly includes the field-level suites.

Just this week, the New Orleans Saints became the latest team to announce attendance changes, saying their season opener will be played before an empty Mercedes-Benz Superdome. The team also calls in-person attendance during their next home game in Week 3 “unlikely,” and won’t even commit to allowing fans in for their Week 5 contest.

The Washington Football Team recently declared that there will be no fans at FedEx Field at any point during the 2020 campaign. The Raiders have also closed their new stadium to the public for its inaugural season. The Packers won’t have live fans for at least its first two home games. The Jets and Giants won’t host fans until further notice. Eight other clubs so far are already publicly expecting their stadiums to be at a greatly-reduced capacity; others will surely follow.

But Jones spoke in glowing terms of the building jokingly called JerryWorld, claiming that the structure’s unique architecture will actually help allow for more Cowboys fans on gameday.

“We opened that stadium,” Jones said of AT&T, which made its debut in   2009 as Cowboys Stadium, “and it was pointed out that if you didn’t open the doors at the right time and had the roof open in a certain way, that you had an air current through there that is pretty impressive, if you will. A serious, serious air current … quite a naturally-built airflow that can be very positive relative to protecting and be safe for our fans. That’s not all of it, but when we finish showing our fans what and how and what we can do to make it safe to come to the ballgames, I’m really proud that we’ve got that stadium to work with.”

The Cowboys’ home can indeed transform itself away from a completely-enclosed building, and that added ventilation may, in fact, help comfort fans who are worried about breathing recirculated air for three hours on a Sunday. The league will still require all fans at NFL stadiums to wear face coverings.

But given the stadium’s sheer size, Jones believes it will also be possible for a large number of fans to socially distance quite easily within its walls.

“We have, also, a stadium that has three million square feet in it,” Jones reminded reporters. “And the fans going in the southwest side do not get near the ones going in the northwest side. As a matter of fact, that goes on like that all the way up until a very reasonable close. When you look at a number in the stadium, don’t think that number’s getting together out there. They’re not. It’ll be in pods of possibly five, ten, fifteen different people.”

Jones alluded to a more official attendance policy being issued by the team in the coming days. But he promises that the team will follow federal, state, and local guidelines in determining how many fans will be permitted to see the Cowboys play in person in 2020.

Whatever the number, Jones is optimistic that the Cowboys fans who show will be treated to a great product on the field and a safe environment inside the stadium. But he also acknowledged that some of the responsibility for keeping everyone healthy will fall on the Cowboys faithful.

“We’ll adhere to all protocols,” Jones announced. “And we will adapt them to the uniqueness of our stadium. That’s within the protocol. We have a real unique situation, and I think that we’re going to be able to really have a great experience. I think that our safety precautions that we’re doing won’t be unfamiliar to a lot of people when we look at the general protocol of the country or we look at how you get together numbers of people. We will have our challenges. The people that will be there will be there at their own volition, just as the players that are on this field out here for the Cowboys are here because they have chosen to be here. Our fans will be in the stadium because they have chosen to be there. I’m completely confident that if I’ve ever seen a general population have had information of where the issues are, where the vulnerabilities are, how to conduct yourself, the ‘do-right rule’ relative to the person with you and beside you that you do know or don’t know, I’m confident that we’ve got a very educated situation and that our fans can come and have a safe experience at our stadium.”

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2020 Cowboys Training Camp: The nuts, bolts, Plexiglas dividers, contact tracers of it all

The Cowboys have made sweeping changes to their daily procedures and their sprawling facilities in order to host training camp in 2020.

Training camp will look very unusual for the 2020 Dallas Cowboys. From the Plexiglas dividers in the palatial locker room to the tarped-off seats in the team’s temporary meeting hall, from the mandatory monitoring checkpoints to the ultraviolet lightboxes for sanitizing phones and jewelry, right down to the proximity trackers the players will be wearing on their wrists.

All of those very out-in-the-open COVID-era add-ons will make for a surreal camp unlike any other. But there will be plenty of other behind-the-scenes changes, too, all implemented in hopes that the upcoming season can be salvaged amidst a global pandemic that has claimed 160,000 lives in the United States alone. Training camp will go on, but it sure won’t be business as usual.

Perhaps the most noticeable difference on Day One of Cowboys camp, though, will be the mercury. It’s not the heat, the old saying goes, it’s the humidity. For Friday, the first scheduled day in shells, Cowboys players and coaches will get a Texas-sized helping of both.

Temperatures are forecast to hit 101 degrees in north Texas on Friday, but it will feel like 106. By way of comparison, it will max out at a lovely 83 in Oxnard, California, where the Cowboys typically set up shop in August.

For his first camp as Cowboys coach, Mike McCarthy plans to subject players to the elements as much possible, using the natural-grass practice field at The Star in Frisco.

“My personal goal is to be on the grass,” he said during last week’s conference call with reporters. “That’s just personal preference.”

That preference is understandable, given McCarthy’s camp history. The grass at St. Norbert College, site of McCarthy’s 13 training camps as coach of the Packers, will be chilling (relatively) in 81-degree temps in Wisconsin on Friday.

“But really, the weather and those types of things will factor into it,” McCarthy continued. “We’re prepared to go outside every morning. That’s the plan. But I’m sure there will be days or a day or two that we may come inside the Ford Center. It’s very beneficial to have that flexibility, but my goal is to be on the grass as much as we can to start camp.”

Besides, McCarthy didn’t add, the Ford Center is being repurposed as the team’s meeting room.

The 12,000-seat indoor stadium and practice field is holding considerably fewer occupants after its recent alterations. Seats- and even entire rows- have been blocked off to keep players safely spread out during coaches’ presentations and sit-down sessions. The gorgeous movie theater normally used for such meetings simply doesn’t allow for social distancing.

For smaller breakout groups, the team can split and scatter.

“When the team breaks into units,” writes The Dallas Morning News‘s David Moore, “the defense goes to the northwest concourse to meet, and the offense takes the southwest corner near Tostitos Plaza.”

Meeting areas in stairwells and hallways. A thinned-out weight room. Reduced seating in the dining hall. Many areas of The Star have had to undergo a COVID-era redecorating. It’s awfully nice to have a 91-acre campus to work with.

The sprawling size of the team’s headquarters actually gives Dallas multiple options on how to reconfigure things, a luxury that few other organizations have. Take, for example, the clear Plexiglas dividers between the lockers.

“The Cowboys have more locker room space than most clubs,” Moore points out. “The main locker room houses 78 players. There’s a back room, normally reserved for rookies in camp, that has an additional 27 lockers. There are another two rooms with a total of 100 lockers at the adjacent Ford Center for high school football. There are at least two other auxiliary rooms that can be used for additional lockers or to store and sanitize equipment between practices.”

According to Moore, “the team could have set aside two empty lockers between every occupied space and made it work.”

Locker partitions means the chess board Amari Cooper leaves up for his matches with Chidobe Awuzie will stay put away for this season. In fact, should any two players get too close to one another, their contact trackers will issue a warning.

“A flashing red light comes on if you get too close,” rookie center Tyler Biadasz said.

The Kinexon trackers, picked up by the players each morning to be worn either on the wrist or attached to a belt loop, monitor players’ movements as they move throughout the facility. They’re set to go off if two of them are within six feet for more than a few seconds. The devices are left at The Star overnight, to be charged and sanitized in preparation for the next day.

In fact, many of the efforts meant to maximize players’ safety happen away from the team’s view. Two different vendors do a daily deep clean of the building. The entire HVAC system has been outfitted with air purification and ionization filters. Special washing machines even treat the laundry generated by the team- 700 pounds per day- so that the jerseys and towels themselves continuously kill germs and prevent their own re-contamination.

Players, coaches, and staff have their own high-tech routine each day. To gain access to the facility, every individual must go through a touchless scanner. Facial recognition programs not only verify the person’s identity, but also take their temperature.

And the actual COVID testing is a completely separate process. Thermal scans. Nasal swabs. A litany of screening questions to be answered. Want the antibody test? There’s a blood draw required for that.

But there’s only so much the next-gen precautions and extra protocols can do. It’s still football, a sport that requires a lot of close-up physical contact of large groups. And not every safety measure available is being adopted quite so readily.

At least one equipment manufacturer is testing a shield that would be worn inside the facemask, meant to block respiratory droplets expelled into the air. It has not met with wide acceptance; Cowboys linebacker Leighton Vander Esch is one of the skeptics.

“I need to breathe when I’m playing,” Vander Esch said, per Calvin Watkins of The Dallas Morning News. “And it’s one thing to have an eye shield on, but to have that other part on your helmet, some guys can wear it … but I’m probably not going to do it. We’re sweating, we’re hitting, and doing all that. I don’t think we’re going to get around it just by wearing a little shield on our chin.”

For now, Vander Esch and the rest of his teammates are already jumping through a considerable number of new hoops just to get ready to play football in 2020.

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