NFL Appeals to Players, Coaches and Staff on COVID, 'If You Feel Something, Say Something'

The NFL is appealing to players, coaches and staff on preventing the spread of COVID-19, telling them, "If you feel something, say something."

In a two-and-a half-minute video, coaches Pete Carroll, Andy Reid, John Harbaugh and Ron Rivera urge NFL players and employees to look out for symptoms of COVID-19. Dr. Allen Sills, the league's chief medical officer, opens and closes the video.

Carroll, Reid, Harbaugh and Rivera repeat a simple message: "If you feel something, say something."

"We encourage players and coaches who are feeling ill, no matter how mild the symptoms, it is best to err on the side of caution," Reid says.

For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below.

NFL COVID-19 Warning
The NFL is appealing to players, coaches and staff to help prevent the spread of COVID-19, telling them: "If you feel something, say something." Head coach Andy Reid of the Kansas City Chiefs wears a... Harry How/Getty Images

"It is vital for all players, coaches and other personnel to understand and report symptoms immediately," NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said in a memo sent to teams on Tuesday and obtained by the Associated Press. "It is also essential for our medical staffs to continue their efforts to monitor everyone in the club environment."

Sills reminds players if they have symptoms but test negative, they will not be held out of the team environment.

"Symptom reporting is more important than ever," Sills told the AP. "Vaccinated people may have very different symptoms. Last year, for those who had COVID-19, they might have a high fever and chills and trouble breathing…and with the vaccination they may have only nasal congestion or a mild sore throat or a headache or fatigue.

"It's challenging to educate people to speak up about symptoms and get tests. It has to happen through multiple forums as we did with vaccinations. Through our athletic trainers and physicians and coaching staffs, there is lots of communication going on."

More than 93 percent of players and almost all club personnel are vaccinated.

"When an individual fails to report their symptoms, they are much more likely to bring the virus to their colleague and loved ones," Goodell said in the memo. "This increases the risk to people around them and puts teams at a disadvantage. We can do better."

Sills is confident the league won't have significant problems playing out the season.

"I am much more optimistic than I was last year simply because we have safe and effective vaccinations we're able to deploy and create safer environments," he said. "There were so many things we didn't know entering last season. We are in a much better place than last year and we have these important tools to use in this battle."

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