The Lass Word: Covid Threat Makes Every Game A Wildcard

Staying healthy is key to stretch run.

I used to look forward to hearing that little chime on my phone.  The one that is the alert sound from packers.com.  I would anxiously log on to the team's official website to see what new bit of information they were pushing out.

 

Now I wince every time I hear it.  I dread that it is a message telling me that another player has been placed on the Covid list, as happened with receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling this week.  The complexion and outlook of a team can change drastically with just one positive test for the sickness.  Especially when you take into account the close contact protocol, which could involve several players at a time, usually at the same position.

 

My first concern is for the health of the player.  So please don't interpret this as being insensitive to the medical issue.  But since this is a football website, let's consider the effect on a team.

 

Green Bay's opponent on Christmas day, the Cleveland Browns, are a good example.  One day they are one of the strongest teams in the AFC, a contender for the number one seed.  Then the virus hits.  They played their Monday night game against the Raiders without quarterbacks Baker Mayfield and Case Keenum, running back Kareem Hunt, receiver Jarvis Landry, tight end Austin Hooper, their two starting tackles, and a couple of starters on defense.   The reserves played valiantly, but the Browns lost on a walkoff field goal.   Cleveland is now considered a long shot to make the playoffs, and is a heavy underdog to the Packers on Saturday.

 

Earlier in the season, most Packer fans felt pretty good about Green Bay's chances to defeat the Kansas City Chiefs.  Then came the news that Aaron Rodgers had gone on to the Covid list.  Immediately, the outlook for that game changed.  The Packers became a solid underdog, and did go on to lose.  We can debate whether the blame goes to Love, or the failure of the field goal units, or the coaches, but there's no doubt the sudden loss of Rodgers completely changed that game.

 

Despite the one game loss of their starting quarterback, overall, knock on wood, you would have to say the team has done an outstanding job following protocols and staying reasonably free of the disease.  Currently, only two players are listed as being on Covid/Reserve, albeit they are two very important players, Kenny Clark and, as mentioned, MVS.  As of this writing, Clark, who missed the Ravens game and whose absence was acutely felt, seems to have a good chance of being cleared to play against the Browns.  MVS likely not.  The Browns have already gotten back Hooper, and will get a few more back in time for Saturday's game.  Obviously, quarterback will be the critical position to watch.

 

Regardless, what looked like a highly competitive game at the beginning of the season, now looks like a bit of a mismatch because of the Browns' battle with Covid.  A battle the Packers could face at any moment down the stretch.  The Packers will be favored in all three of their remaining games against the Browns, Vikings and Lions.  But Covid makes every game a wildcard.  What makes this a scary propostiion for the coaching staff is that they only control the protocols while the players are on the premises.  They are on their own once they go home to their families and friends and social circle.  Some are tested daily, others intermittently, some not at all minus symptoms. 

 

Here's where having players who are effective leaders plays a crucial role.  Veterans such as Rodgers, Davante Adams, Marcedes Lewis and Adrian Amos go a long way toward keeping everybody in line.  Guys know they will be accountable to the rest of the team.  It's not perfect, as the infamous Halloween party will attest to, but for the most part, it seems to be working.  The vast majority of the roster seems to be doing a great job recognizing they need to be careful and available.  As we head to the playoffs, that will be as important as blocking, tackling, passing and receiving.  

 

Actually, more important.

 

Once again, the Pro Bowl is a Joke

I don't know why I continue to be frustrated by this.  The Pro Bowl lost its relevance the minute fan voting became part of the selection process.  Fans vote for their favorites.  As a result, it's more of a celebrity name recognition achievement to make the team, as opposed to those having the best seasons.  Case in point is Packers linebacker De'Vondre Campbell, who was left off the squad.  The inside linebackers chosen for the NFC side were Micah Parsons and Bobby Wagner.  I won't argue with Parsons, who has had a phenomenal rookie year for the Cowboys.  But Campbell should have been taken ahead of Wagner.  Campbell has more tackles for loss, more quarterback hits, more interceptions, more forced fumbles and more sacks than Wagner.  But fans recognize Wagner's name from his days with the long-gone Legion of Boom.  Campbell is relatively new to the elite level at his position.  I had to chuckle  at seeing Rasul Douglas listed as an alternate, while Campbell was left off completely.  No disrespect for Rasul, who has been a godsend, but he made it because of a couple of splashy pick sixes on national television.  He wasn't even on an active roster until October 6, while Campbell has been a stalwart in every one of the Packers' fourteen games.  

 

All star games work in baseball and basketball because you can still play the game pretty much without hesitation.  Football is a brutal game of profound physical contact.  Nobody wants to get hurt in a game that means nothing.  So the game itself is a glorified touch football scrimmage.  I stopped watching it years ago.  But it still bugs me when a Packer player gets disrespected. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Ken Lass is a former Green Bay television sports anchor and 43 year media veteran, a lifelong Packers fan, and a shareholder.

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6 points
 

Comments (48)

Fan-Friendly This filter will hide comments which have ratio of 5 to 1 down-vote to up-vote.
Coldworld's picture

December 23, 2021 at 03:32 pm

That’s the public pro bowl voting for you every year. A year late or a few splash plays in the national spotlight.

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TarynsEyes's picture

December 23, 2021 at 04:23 pm

First, let us all give thanks to all those demanding vaccines, even though the vaccinated are still contracting it to a number that games possibly being canceled was an actual discussion.

Secondly, the mere mention of the Pro Bowl should be considered a criminal act against the game and the fans and where it seems that denying the fan vote would not today prevent the crime that would still be done to the players that deserve it and to be recognized as a legitimate Pro Bowler, and it certainly isn't just about the Packer player being snubbed, since that's the issue with fan voting, to begin with.

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Oppy's picture

December 23, 2021 at 08:25 pm

Right now in wisconsin, non-vaccinated people account for more than 5 times the new positive cases than vaccinated. Don’t know what to tell you, except that the vaccine is critical in stopping the spread of covid-19. That’s not a belief, that’s a statistically backed fact.

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Crankbait's picture

December 23, 2021 at 10:43 pm

Bullshit.

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barutanseijin's picture

December 24, 2021 at 05:22 am

Tough talk is just posturing when you have nothing to back it up with.

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Oppy's picture

December 24, 2021 at 08:51 am

It'll be okay, Crankbait. Just take a deep breath and relax.

I know, science, data, facts.. scary stuff. It takes time and education to get the hang of it.

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Bure9620's picture

December 24, 2021 at 03:21 am

Yup, this is now a pandemic of the unvaxxed..

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dobber's picture

December 24, 2021 at 09:23 am

It's a tragedy of the unvaccinated, but a pandemic of all of us.

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flackcatcher's picture

December 24, 2021 at 10:56 am

It's not as cut and dry as you make it out to be Oppy. As someone who has to deal with this every day there are real (and very serious issues) that this administration has tried to sweep 'under the rug'. And we are now seeing the blow back, and it's only going to get worse. The good news is Omni may be far more infectious, but it is far weaker than the previous versions. Remember, the vaccine is used to boost the immune response, not fight the virus itself. The other problem is the ham handed and political response by those who questioned both Public Health and the current admiration policy. Human nature being what it is, no policymaker can act like a 'jack booted thug' and think they will get their way, even in a clear health crisis. (The other real problem is we don't know how many people have natural immunity from the first variant when it swept though in 2018 on.) I wish our government had been like the NFL and pro sports in general when dealing with Covid. They showed far more farsightedness and flexibility over the long haul. The Packers have been a model in dealing with this. Now go crush the Browns...

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Oppy's picture

December 25, 2021 at 12:21 am

What do you deal with every day that involves the virus and the administration 'sweeping (things) under the rug"? Do you work in health care administration?

Please explain: " Remember, the vaccine is used to boost the immune response, not fight the virus itself."

This is how all vaccines work. Viruses need a host (human in this case) to propagate and spread. If a person's immune response wards off the virus (coronavirus SARS-CoV-2), that person does not develop Covid-19, and therefore, the virus can not propagate and be spread to others.

The immune system literally fights the virus. If you have given your immune system the ability to identify the virus and combat it- which is literally what a vaccine does- you are going to great lengths via semantics to claim the vaccine doesn't fight the virus.. or you simply don't really understand what you're talking about.

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flackcatcher's picture

December 25, 2021 at 01:11 pm

I am in my 'day job' a 0-9 in the USMC (looking forward to my long delayed retirement :-) From the very beginning I have commented based on dealing with and being advised by my medical advisors when we thought this was the worse case situation. (escaped virus from a level-4 lab in Wuhan?) And yes, I was among the first who got the 'jab', and suffered the side effects to boot. While I was among the minority, it was a fairly large percentage among our Marines and Naval personnel who had to deal with the side effects. And these are among those who are in the best shape in the USMC. (Not me, old dogs are still old dogs...) So yes, from both a professional and personal view, I have a more well rounded view than the average American when dealing with Covid. The real failure was not in the execution of rolling out the vaccine, but the political (and yes it was a political decision) not to take a total view in the use of the many other treatments to help the body fight the virus. I stand by my statement that both our policymakers, and public health officials at all levels, failed in both explaining to the public what we were dealing with and having a long term plan to combat the threat. Despite all the screams, we have come though in good shape. But this is a massive wake-up call for all of us. Next time we may be not so lucky...

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Oppy's picture

December 25, 2021 at 07:10 pm

Next time, the biggest issue is going to be the 20-30% of Americans who don't believe in science and statistical data, and mistake public health issues for political conspiracy.

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Oppy's picture

December 25, 2021 at 07:12 pm

Thanks for your long tenured service, by the way.

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LambeauPlain's picture

December 24, 2021 at 11:14 am

You have fallen for the political narrative and it is very divisive and dangerous.

"Vaccination" is an activity. Immunization is the objective. Both natural immunity and artificial immunity help protect against Covid.

Ignoring natural immunity, pretending it doesn't exist or worse, does not protect is ignorance. There is a reason natural immunity is ignored by Biden, Fauci, big hospital, big pharma...no money in it, no fear, no power or control.

I guarantee if natural immunity was failing as fast as the mRNA vaccines, it would be blared non stop 24/7 from big media and big tech.

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Oppy's picture

December 24, 2021 at 04:33 pm

Natural immunity isn’t permanent. Talk to front line health care workers about how many times they contracted Covid before there was a vaccine. I work closely with a guy who has now caught Covid twice in an 8 month period- unvaccinated.

The big difference between natural/vaccination protection is in order to have natural defenses, you have to contract the virus. Contracting the virus means you risk spreading it to others. Catching the virus means you risk becoming seriously Ill or perhaps dying.

This isn’t political and it’s not rocket science.

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Oppy's picture

December 23, 2021 at 09:19 pm

Removed because it's the holidays and I shouldn't be a jerk just because of syntax.

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croatpackfan's picture

December 23, 2021 at 04:25 pm

As Pro-Bowl game lost any meaningful football, I understand why more and more players are refuse to show there and actiong the role some monie director choses for them. That is how significant is meaning of that game and those votes.

On the other hand, I'm glad that people does not recognize some of important Packers players, as they may be overlooked in the grand scheme of preparation for the game against Packers. I love that, because people become careless when they believe they have everything under the control.

1 points
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dobber's picture

December 24, 2021 at 09:12 am

The level of play in all-star/all-pro games is so lousy that's it's unwatchable. All they really do is provide a performance benchmark for those named who have incentives in their contracts...and with that in mind, why would any team want fans assessing those benchmarks for them? All they do is expose these guys who play to the potential for more contact and non-contact injuries.

1 points
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MarkinMadison's picture

December 23, 2021 at 06:53 pm

Trump is vaccinated. He even got the booster. I hope everyone gets vaccinated. I have a lot of nurses in my family. They're tired. In October, unvaccinated individuals had a 5 times greater risk of testing positive for COVID-19 and a 14 times greater risk of dying from it, as compared to fully vaccinated individuals, according to data compiled by the CDC. Additionally, unvaccinated individuals had a 10 times greater risk of testing positive for COVID-19 and a 20 times greater risk of dying from it, as compared to fully vaccinated individuals with a booster. So yeah, if the NFL wants to give differential treatment based upon vaccination status, I'm good.

9 points
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cinpackback's picture

December 23, 2021 at 10:10 pm

We have a couple nurses in our family and they are sick and tired of caring for unvaccinated people. This is breaking their spirits and it doesn’t have to be this way…

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HawkPacker's picture

December 24, 2021 at 08:42 am

You would think that all nurses, being in the medical field, would be vaccinated however, when I have been to three different doctors in two different states, I asked 3 nurses that I dealt with if they had the vaccine and all 3 said no and had no plan to get them either. Go figure!

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Oppy's picture

December 24, 2021 at 08:54 am

Which health care centers in what states?

Please share.

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HawkPacker's picture

December 26, 2021 at 06:59 pm

Iowa and Florida. Really do not want to share the health centers.

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Crankbait's picture

December 23, 2021 at 10:42 pm

blah blah blah.
If you want to believe all the bullshit from the CDC and the media go right ahead and hide in your basement for the rest your life. whatever makes you happy.
But please stop your virtue signaling and shaming of those who are not so easily controlled and believe otherwise.

-9 points
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barutanseijin's picture

December 24, 2021 at 05:38 am

Me tough guy. Me no need facts. Facts fake. Me use internet clichés.

2 points
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Oppy's picture

December 24, 2021 at 08:58 am

Ignoring data and research doesn't make you a rugged individualist who isn't a sheep, it just makes you willfully ignorant.

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dobber's picture

December 24, 2021 at 09:06 am

There are sheep of different colors.

He's comical in that he's no less a sheep than the people he's criticizing, just following a different shepherd.

3 points
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jannes bjornson's picture

December 24, 2021 at 09:11 am

I hear the Preacher is handing out Holiday Cocktails of clorox and ivermectin with a maraschino cherry garnish over at the feed store.
He don't bee-lieve that there Science either--go figure?

1 points
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Guam's picture

December 24, 2021 at 09:18 am

Crankbait,

As an American, you are constitutionally guaranteed the right to refuse this vaccine as part of your personal freedom. However if you are like most of us, you have already gotten literally dozens of vaccines as a child against all kinds of diseases (the list is stunningly long and starts shortly after birth). And as an adult you likely have been vaccinated for tetanus and maybe pneumonia. What is different about this vaccine?

Guam

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flackcatcher's picture

December 24, 2021 at 11:18 am

Crankbait has a point here on the big picture. If you can get past his language, he is correct in both the public health response and the political response. All in all, it has made getting folks to take the vaccines that much harder. This vax vs unvax, made a clear public health emergency into a political issue with massive damage to the trust that we put into our system. And we as a society and country are reaping the results. (On other point not discussed. All three vaccines and their boosters did not go through the normal checks done by the FDA and other health agency. That would give any health professional pause. How would the average person react to lack of understanding among those whose job is to judge if this medicine is ok to use)

-1 points
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Guam's picture

December 24, 2021 at 12:05 pm

I agree that the politicizing the vaccine has made a mess and taken what should have been a health issue into the political arena where it doesn't belong. However vaccines have a long and productive medical history so I don't get the antipathy toward this specific vaccine.

Your point about the rapid approval process for this vaccine might have been valid when it first came out, but there is now a sufficient data base about its impact that I believe that issue is moot. The vaccine works and has minimal side effects - the usual story with almost all vaccines.

Not sure what has been screwed up can be unscrewed, but common sense about vaccines (we all have taken them many times) needs to prevail at some point.

2 points
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MarkinMadison's picture

December 24, 2021 at 12:32 pm

There have been a number of vaccine skeptics floating around out there. Jenny McCarthy-types. The problem is that instead of being clear in their messaging the Trump administration was out there trying to have it both ways. COVID's not really a threat, so wear a mask if you want, get a vaccine if you want. The way to undo the damage is for Trump to be honest and say, "Yeah, I'm lucky to be alive. I've been vaccinated. I got the booster. I hope you do too." He is 90% there. If he gets out on the road with that message, consistently, I think it would do a world of good.

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flackcatcher's picture

December 25, 2021 at 01:45 pm

If he did that both sides would do everything to destroy him. This is not about public health for these people. It is simply to gain whatever political advantage public be damn. As to Guam's point, no we don't have enough data yet. We have been part of one of the biggest experiments in medical history. Was it necessary, knowing what we did then. Without a doubt. But there are so many unknowns that have not shown up, so we do not have a clear picture. Like we did with smallpox, sometimes the risk is warranted. But the public deserves to know what the risk factors are, and our government did a terrible job in letting us know.

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Guam's picture

December 26, 2021 at 04:31 pm

For what it is worth, my viewpoint on the data is reflective of the opinions of multiple physicians and one research virologist. You are absolutely correct that this vaccine was initially a huge medical experiment, particularly since this was the first time a messengered RNA vaccine was being tried. However by now the medical establishment has gotten very comfortable with its efficacy and minimal side effects (at least versus the consequences of not taking the vaccine).

Was the public told of the risks of this vaccine? Hardly. And that is a very large issue on which we agree. And part of the reason why I oppose mandates.

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MarkinMadison's picture

December 24, 2021 at 12:33 pm

I'll quibble with you there. There is legal precedent for vaccine mandates.

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Guam's picture

December 24, 2021 at 10:53 pm

You may well be right (I'm not an attorney), but unpopular mandates that infringe on personal freedom can also provoke severe responses. I would much prefer education to a mandate.

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flackcatcher's picture

December 25, 2021 at 01:32 pm

MM is right, (but according to my JAG advisor only in a very narrow legal range. There is a lot of unknown legal ground here that the courts at all levels have tried to avoid. One side note. There is a case that might go to a General Court over a relieved 0-5, and then incoming CO of a Burke class destroyer who refused the 'jab'. There is a good chance that this will break new ground no matter how this falls) I too much prefer education over a mandate. One of our real issues is our policymakers in this administration likes to use mandates rather make the hard explanation in areas of public policy. And it has cost them dearly.

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Nordom's picture

December 23, 2021 at 08:41 pm

It should be noted that fan votes only make up 1/3rd of voting (the other 2/3rds are coaches and media), and there are known cases of deserving players being some of the top fan-voted candidates. For example, Creed Humphrey on the Chiefs, who looks to be this year's top C, was the top-voted center by fans...but did not make it. I can only conclude that there's blame to go around equally between all three groups voting for the collective notable omissions.

1 points
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Oppy's picture

December 24, 2021 at 09:06 am

The issue is that coaches and players are biased and will generally cast their first-choice vote for a given position for their team mates or friends first. Backed with Fan voting, who generally just vote their team, it becomes just a popularity contest.

the AP and PFWA All-Pro teams are voted on by knowledgeable football writers who are less likely to be biased. The Sporting News all-pro team is voted on by players and NFL executives, so while they are extremely knowledgeable, they are probably subject to higher bias (unless they are not allowed to cast votes for their own team, but I'm unsure if that's the case.)

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Bearmeat's picture

December 24, 2021 at 05:54 am

Most of the (very young) research I’m seeing and hearing on Omicron is that, yes, it’s 70x more contagious than the original virus and 10x more than Delta. But, more importantly, it’s far less deadly. I’m a musician, not an epidemiologist, but from what I understand, this falls in line with normal viral mutation. Those who have had a full complement of covid shots are not at all likely to end up in the hospital.

We’re all going to get it. This is almost all the way to epidemic status. The pandemic will be over soon. Epidemic = Seasonally recurring. It’ll never go away. But that also means, like the flu, it’s not likely to wipe out millions every single year.

In the realm of NFL football, at first I was angry about the NFL changes to the Covid policy for the vaccinated. But after thinking about it a bit longer, and reading more about Omicron, it makes sense. It’s inevitable all these guys are going to get it. You just hope it doens’t happen to a very important player before a playoff game…

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Guam's picture

December 24, 2021 at 08:56 am

Happy Holidays Bearmeat!

I completely agree with what you said save one small change. I think you mean "endemic" rather than "epidemic". Epidemic means a one time infection that everyone gets. Endemic means it is with us for the long term (like the flu). Because it is capable of re-infecting people who have already had it, the indication is that COVID will turn into a long term infectious disease. And like the flu, there will be annual booster shots for prevention and mitigation. And pills for mitigation should you catch it. The medical profession is catching up to this disease, but I fear it will become one more contagion for the long term.

3 points
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dobber's picture

December 24, 2021 at 09:21 am

Agreed. We as a society need to come to grips with the fact that this thing isn't going to be eradicated and that we'll need to learn to live with it.

2 points
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Bearmeat's picture

December 24, 2021 at 11:59 am

Yes. Endemic. Thank you. Dum musicians R dum. 🤦🏼‍♂️😂

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Guam's picture

December 24, 2021 at 12:08 pm

Thats okay, I still trip over their and there........:)

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murf7777's picture

December 24, 2021 at 10:19 am

Bearmeat, I agree with your thoughts except that everyone will get it. I don’t get the flu shot annually and don’t remember except decades ago where I had the flu. That said, I believe that some people do have immunity from some viruses. BTW, I am fully vaccinated as I fear this to be far more dangerous than the flu, right or wrong that is my impression. Interesting before I was eligible for the vaccine my wife got Covid and I never got it, so maybe I’m immune. Who knows, I took the path of better safer than sorry.

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Ferrari-Driver's picture

December 24, 2021 at 11:52 am

BEARMEAT, Merry Christmas to you and everyone here.

I'm not an epidemiologist either and unlike you I'm not a musician, unless being a terrible accordion player counts.

Our COVID vaccines were developed and available within a year of the onset of the virus in this country. Historically, vaccines required roughly 5 years from the start of development until it was thoroughly tested and approved for use.

I can understand the difference of opinion regarding whether to get the shots among people. I'm not 25 any more regardless of what I may think and had the flu years ago and didn't like that one bit. Since the, I now elect to get flu shots every year and I decided after doing my best to weight the risk/reward aspects of the COVID vaccines, decided to get all three shots. That was my choice. I would be reluctant to force my decisions upon others if I even had the authority to do so and I am also reluctant to speak negatively regarding decisions which differ from those of my own.

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Bearmeat's picture

December 24, 2021 at 12:00 pm

Agreed!!

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dobber's picture

December 24, 2021 at 09:26 am

"Covid threat makes every game a wildcard"

You can only play with the guys healthy enough to do so and against whatever group the team across from you can field in a given week. It's always been that way and always will.

1 points
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