The NFL is going to need to bubble up somehow if they want a season.Wait till they try and get the NFL up and running again!! Can't wait to see that crap show.
NFL should go with a bubble approach similar to NBA and NHL. So far neither of those leagues has had an issue. Travel is the biggest risk with sports and the NFL won’t have any better luck with that then MLB is having. Disney just announced that a few thousand hotel rooms will sit vacant for quite a while. I think they could accommodate the league or at least half the league if they do 2 sites like the NHL is doing. It would be simple to convert some baseball and soccer fields to football. They might have to get creative with gym equipment and training space, but it’s doable.Wait till they try and get the NFL up and running again!! Can't wait to see that crap show.
The NFL is going to need to bubble up somehow if they want a season.
orNo, Silly ... AC in the gondolas.
I've been predicting that the daily infections will decline noticeably in about two weeks from now. It's going to follow the same pattern as NY and every other spike worldwide. The difference is that Florida didn't have a spike until June and neither did California or the other States having issues now.Another 253 deaths and 9956 infections.
The "good" news is that it appears cases have plateaued since Florida tightened restrictions somewhat. It suggests deaths should ultimately stabilize.
The bad news... cases aren't exactly declining very quickly, if at all. 200+ deaths per day isn't exactly a level you want to stabilize at.
Over the next week or so, we should get a better idea of whether cases are actually dropping at a fair rate or not. If not, Florida will really have to consider tighter restrictions.
“Cases in Florida may be starting to come down” - CNN.
To a 10,000 cases a day baseline.
Shocking at best.
The hardest part in all of this for me is that we haven't wrapped our minds around the reality we have to deal with this for another year most likely, and remain vigilant. This isn't a a storm that blows over. We're in a full scale World Calamity: World Pandemic I, if you will. "When will shows resume? When will cruising resume? When can we stop wearing masks?" Not in any predictable time frame.
Case numbers can be mitigated though, as seen elsewhere.Until we have an effective Vax or reach the point that enough people have had it and transmission is reduced we will see what we see on cases per day.
I've been predicting that the daily infections will decline noticeably in about two weeks from now. It's going to follow the same pattern as NY and every other spike worldwide. The difference is that Florida didn't have a spike until June and neither did California or the other States having issues now.
I could be wrong but that's what I think is going to happen.
Case numbers can be mitigated though, as seen elsewhere.
People need to do their part to fight this. Otherwise it won’t be climate change or a meteor to worry about. A vaccine would be a huge boost of course but that won’t save the next year.I would add “for a time”. Then, human nature kicks in and round and round we go. We are seeing that now with some places that were hit hard early, locked down for a while, and now cases are rising again, because people.
So did California. Nobody can say California wasn't strict enough or opened too soon. Yet, once they started opening a similar spike happened to the Florida spike.NY completely locked down the state.
Cases will eventually start to decrease but I would be surprised if Florida follows the April/May state trajectories.
There’s a school of thought that the transmission of the virus slows once it hits around 20% of the population. Not herd immunity, but NY state is an example of this, as well as to varying degrees Italy and Sweden. I’m becoming of the mind that lockdowns are delaying the inevitable; we have 50 states to look to for examples and just about each have had waves notwithstanding different approaches at different times.So did California. Nobody can say California wasn't strict enough or opened too soon. Yet, once they started opening a similar spike happened to the Florida spike.
That's why my theory is that everywhere that successfully suppressed the curve early on with "mitigation" will have a spike upon reopening and that it takes a certain percentage of the population infected to be able to keep the numbers low and steady while opened long term.
Hopefully I'm right but that's my theory based on looking at the data.
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