In every NFL season, there are losing teams who hit December and just want to get to January, get the schedule done and go home.
In 2020, it's all about the league itself getting to January during a pandemic that daily is becoming harder to deal with.
If Week 12 is a harbinger, NFL executives will be doing more scrambling than Lamar Jackson and Kyler Murray. They've already twice postponed the Thanksgiving night showcase game between Baltimore and Pittsburgh, and it's still in jeopardy for Tuesday night with more than 20 Ravens on the COVID-19 list. Denver, thanks to protocol violations by its quarterbacks, started an undrafted rookie wide receiver at the critical position and, unsurprisingly, barely moved the ball.
There also were hefty fines to the Saints and Patriots for not being as diligent about the coronavirus protocols as they need to be.
The NFL deserves praise for getting this far with minimal disruptions compared to what we are seeing in the college game. Yet there is a foreboding environment right now.
Teams have been ordered to steer clear of their facilities on Monday and Tuesday as the pandemic rages across the country. Pro football tries to soldier on, but for how long?
"I think we have to really consider a bubble," says Bill Cowher, the Hall of Fame-bound coach and now a CBS Sports analyst. "When you think about the country right now, we're going through a second wave. You have to be flexible in your thinking.
"We're talking about shutting down facilities. We're talking about teams that may not be able to practice all week. I start to think about teams later on as we go through this, that they get out of the playoffs. They become more reckless and careless with their actions off the field.