It feels like another time, but it was only a few months ago that the NFL managed to pull off what seemed like a minor miracle. With Roger Goodell leading the cheers from his basement, the league conducted a virtual draft that stocked teams with new players and, more importantly, infected no one.
The actual season was always going to be harder. For that, the NFL needed a real miracle and the buy-in of everyone — including the Las Vegas Raiders — to clear a path to the Super Bowl in February.
Whether the title game will be played Feb. 7 in Tampa Bay still remains in question, halfway through a schedule upended at times by the coronavirus. If anyone needed a reminder the virus was in charge, they got it this week when the unbeaten Pittsburgh Steelers put quarterback Ben Roethlisberger and three others on the COVID-19 list after tight end Vance McDonald tested positive.
Equally as worrisome for the NFL, the number of people testing positive doubled this week in the league's latest results. The new positives included 15 players and 41 other team officials.
One thing is certain: With empty or partially filled stadiums and fake crowd noise filling broadcasts, this isn't the NFL anyone wants.
That includes the new team in Sin City, where a 5-3 start and a win over the defending Super Bowl champion Chiefs should have fans dancing on the Las Vegas Strip. If the town is excited, the Raiders seem to be the last to know.
``We can't sense it,'' Raiders coach Jon Gruden said. ``We have played in front of empty stadiums and we don't go anywhere. You do look forward to those times, but you really have a strange, I don't know, experience going right now, that's for sure."
It's strange all around the league, though the NFL has managed to make it through nine weeks of play, thanks to voluminous COVID-19 testing and a growing awareness among players that they don't want to be the ones messing things up.