All NFL veterans will have reported to training camp by Tuesday. For Vikings players that won't mean much more than a swab up the nose and a virtual meeting with coaches, but there are many questions about how the NFL, and the Vikings, are preparing for the 2020 season amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Q: What will happen Tuesday when players report?
A: Most Vikings players are scheduled to arrive at TCO Performance Center in Eagan on Tuesday, but they won't be allowed in the building. They'll walk into a BioReference Laboratories trailer in the parking lot. At one of four stations, they will undergo a nasal swab coronavirus test and be given the option of having an antibody test via blood sample. They'll go home, await results and participate in virtual meetings with coaches.
Under testing protocols finalized over the weekend, players will need three negative test results in four days before entering team facilities on the fifth day, which would be Saturday. The fifth and sixth days of camp are for physicals and equipment, followed by an eight-day strength and conditioning period.
Q: What happens if someone on the team tests positive for the coronavirus?
A: All players and Vikings employees who test positive or come in close contact with an infected person must be quarantined. Players will be placed on the league's COVID-19 reserve list, as receiver and first-round draft pick Justin Jefferson and three other rookies were on Monday.
A contact tracing report, from tracking devices worn by everyone while at the team facility, will identify those who came within "close contact," defined by the league as "within six feet for about 10 minutes" or "direct physical contact during practice." Those people must also be quarantined and aren't allowed in the building until testing negative. A 24-hour return from the reserve list is possible if a player is cleared as part of contact tracing.
Q: When can players return after a positive test?