What would no-fan games look like?



It would look silly for the NFL to play in 70,000-seat venues with no spectators. But the league, as free agency and the draft most recently showed, can be quite rigid. At games, various coaches are stationed in press boxes. Were the NFL to move games to smaller stadiums, these sites would need to feature up-to-code facilities. Although positioning where certain offensive and defensive coordinators sit sounds rather trivial in the grand scheme, issues like this will come up if teams are asked to temporarily relocate.

The NFL playing without fans would seemingly present an interesting opportunity to capture more in-game sound than ever before. Teams will be against that. Given the money and stakes attached to the nation’s most popular sports league, the NFL will not allow XFL-style access. Beyond audibles and approved mic’d-up soundbites, the NFL game-day audio remains largely hidden. Empty stadiums would not only open the door to non-network-friendly dialogue, but it would also make coaching more difficult due to the possibilities of sensitive matters emerging.

That aspect would both add to the league’s already-rampant paranoia and create chances for historically entertaining sequences for viewers.

Playoffs could be grim



A game without fans would eliminate home-field advantage and may strip football of some of its mystique. The “fan-less football, no football” argument checks out, but these games could be quite depressing.

Home-field advantage disappearing would weaken some teams and make the playoffs a somber slog. Division championships would be fairly meaningless — beyond the four that secure bye access — with no home-game atmosphere coming along with it. That would increase the chances of a “road” wild-card team making a Super Bowl run — which hasn’t happened since 2010 — but a motivation issue could emerge come January.

NFL playoff pay is minimal; players on teams that lost wild-card games made between $28,000-$31,000 for a first-round appearance last season. That number only increased to $56K by the conference championship round. The tight surveillance and radically altered lifestyles a season under these circumstances could bring would increase the number of players who would like to end this asterisks-filled season after Week 17 and return to whatever normal life resembles in January 2021.

Silent Super Bowl?



Should Super Bowl LV occur in a fan-less venue (slated to be Raymond James Stadium in Tampa), it would signal a stark reminder of how much — nearly 11 months after it arrived in the United States — COVID-19 altered life. While the NBA is facing this same issue for when/if it holds its Finals, it dwarfs in popularity compared to the Super Bowl. Holding one devoid of most of the pageantry with which the game is associated would be perhaps the defining coronavirus sports image.

Novelty aside, this would not be a celebrated Super Bowl — effectively minimizing the game and the accomplishment of winning it.

Scheduling matters



A players strike paused the 1982 season for two months. The NFL pushed back Super Bowl XVII and restructured the playoff format —which became a 16-team, bye-less bracket — but each team lost seven games because of the strike. The NFL will not consider shortening the 2020 season for months and may try to salvage its 17-week slate even if a delay occurs come September. But the NFLPA might take issue with a lengthy hiatus and a full 16-game season.

This regular season bleeding into the offseason would give players less recovery time before free agency and OTAs. And as this year showed, not being healthy going into free agency proved costly for certain players.

The NFL delayed its schedule release until May 9 and is reportedly planning to structure teams’ dockets in a way that will make them easier to adjust. It would seem teams’ September slates would contain non-division games. With interconference contests being the least consequential on teams’ schedules, for tiebreaker purposes, it’s worth wondering if the NFL will stack those early. Lopping AFC-NFC games off the schedule would make for a pre-interleague-play MLB-style season and benefit teams with tough interconference divisional draws.

Another fight looming?



No specific language exists within this CBA providing a road map for compensation during a pandemic. If the NFL is forced to shorten its season, or cancel it, an avalanche of financial issues will arise. The majority of NFLers rely on their weekly base salaries. Those will not arrive until games are played. If the coronavirus shortens the season, the NFL and NFL Players Association will need to hammer out an agreement — but said deal will almost certainly cost players some game checks.

In the event COVID-19 wipes out the season or severely shortens it, the NFLPA will need to fight to prevent players’ contracts from tolling. A tolled contract means it rolls over to the next year as is. Contracts tolling because of a pandemic would obviously be a raw deal for players. Perpetually fighting against ownership, the NFLPA will be in for another one on this front.

Spillover into next year



This year’s CBA passed by a 1,019-959 margin — in large part because of owners’ class-warfare effort. The CBA proposal sweetened the pot enough for the minimum-salary player but did less to improve the middle- and upper-class talents’ situations. The carrot of the addition of the 17th regular-season game and extra playoff team for players was to be bigger cap spikes — brought on by record-shattering TV deals, which the league (precoronavirus) planned to negotiate this year — compared to the approximately $10 million-per-year bumps the 2011 CBA brought. A year without fans may change the equation.

With an unprecedented loss of revenue impacting teams — should spectators, in fact, not be allowed in stadiums — 2021’s cap spike will be in jeopardy. Although it seems in poor taste to discuss reduced earnings of millionaires and near-millionaires, players in line for extensions or free-agency paydays may see historically poor timing hijack those plans.

The tenuousness of a 2020 season

More than 1,700 players appear on active rosters after training camp. Due to injuries and various promotions from practice squads, dozens of others see game action annually. If one of them tests positive, it could slam the door on the 2020 season. The quarantines that Gobert’s positive test caused will pale in comparison to what would have to happen if an NFL player contracts the virus during the preseason or regular season.

The league will need to walk an unprecedented tightrope, and extensive hurdles stand in the path to starting the season on time and sticking the landing with a February Super Bowl. It seems unreasonable — given the events of the past five weeks — to expect the NFL’s season to be uninterrupted. As evidenced by the NBA, NHL and March Madness, an interruption threatens the season. The NFL must be prepared for the worst (again, from a sports perspective) that there will be too many impediments to starting and finishing its 101st season.