Goodell wants to reopen all 32 NFL team facilities ‘collectively’

NFL draft Roger Goodell

FILE – In this April 25, 2019, file photo, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell speaks ahead of the first round at the NFL football draft in Nashville, Tenn. In a memo sent to the 32 teams Monday, April 6, 2020, and obtained by The Associated Press, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell outlined procedures for the April 23-25 draft. The guidelines include no group gatherings. (AP Photo/Steve Helber, FIle)

Roger Goodell described the last few weeks as some of the most unpredictable in National Football League history, but the commissioner says he is moving forward and intends to play the NFL season “as planned”.

Goodell said it is too early to know how the coronavirus outbreak will play out over the coming months but the league is making plans and talking to government officials about how best to get the teams on the field.

“We’re going to be prepared, obviously, to play as planned,” Goodell told ESPN from the basement of his home just before he announced the first pick in the 2020 entry draft. “But we’re also going to be prepared and look at alternatives.

“Right now, it’s too early to speculate on anything specific that we’d be focusing on. We’ve still got three and a half months before we kick off (the preseason).”

Asked if the league would play without fans, Goodell declined to give a specific answer. He said the next step is to reopen the club’s 32 training facilities around the country.

“We have to do it collectively as 32 teams,” he said.

“The one thing I’ve always learned, and I think it’s been evident in the past few weeks, is that it’s difficult to predict the future,” Goodell said. “Particularly in this kind of environment.

“None of us could have made a realistic expectation about what was going to happen over the last 60 days if you look back three or four months ago.”

The league offices have been shut down because of the coronavirus pandemic. Goodell and team owners have been communicating with employees and government officials at the federal, state and civic level via virtual platforms such as Zoom and FaceTime.

“I just believe that our job is to continue on, and to operate within whatever guidelines are necessary to keep our personnel safe,” he said.

“But we also need to carry on. We need to move towards the future, we need to make sure that we’re prepared when we come out of this to be in position to start our season on time and to play our season. That’s our role.”

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