Two of the things that are most celebrated about our elite athlete heroes are “always puts team first” and “always respects the fans.” How often have we heard such gushing clichés in sports journalism and chatter? It seems nothing is more celebrated and revered than proving loyalty to fans and team.
Yet when it comes to COVID-19 vaccinations, a small but significant group of NFL players are refusing to say whether they’re vaccinated, which presumably means that most of them are not vaccinated.
Three of the most important members of the Minnesota Vikings fall into that category — quarterback Kirk Cousins, wide receiver Adam Thielen, and safety Harrison Smith. These are not just any players. This is the Vikings’ highest paid player, their beloved over-achieving homie, and their longest serving player who has been selected for five Pro Bowls.
Last September, when asked about COVID-19, Cousins was cavalier about a disease that has killed an estimated 3 million people worldwide. Here is what Cousins told podcaster Kyle Brandt, when Brandt asked an impressively difficult to evade question: “On a spectrum of one – masks are stupid and you’re all a bunch of lemmings – and ten is ‘I’m not leaving my master bathroom for the next 10 years. Where do you land?”
“I’m not going to call anybody stupid for the trouble it could get me in,” Cousins responded. “But I’m about a .0001.”
In the local sports news coverage and talk I’m consuming, I’m mostly hearing defense of athletes making the decision to forgo getting vaccinations, which have proven remarkably safe and effective after over 3 billion doses worldwide. I’m paraphrasing, but I’m hearing a lot of this kind of thing from fans, analysts, and journalists about unvaccinated NFL players, even from people who have vaccinated themselves:
“It’s their body, so how dare anyone question their personal decision!”
“They’re young and in prime condition, so I competely understand why they wouldn’t bother.”
“How can the NFL suits punish them for their personal or religious decision?”
Explanatory Note: The alleged “punishment” is that the NFL has some pretty basic public health restrictions for unvaccinated players. As I understand them, they can’t eat with the rest of the vaccinated team, don’t have as much freedom to be in crowds when traveling, need to wear masks in many situations, and can be fined for violating the public health protocols. Quite responsibly, the NFL is trying to limit spread from these unvaccinated players, but many players and fans view this as punishment.
Team First?
But hold on, what about that all-important “always puts team first” standard that we constantly spotlight when it comes to our pedestaled athletes?
To be clear, putting yourself at risk of getting sick or quarantined means putting yourself at risk of not being there for your team. Would we be forgiving if an athlete insisted on engaging in other types o risky behaviors that threatens their ability to be present for their teammates at practices or game day, such as bull-riding, motor cross racing, free solo climbing, or chronic binge-drinking?
And remember, this is an infectious disease that often spreads asymptomatically, unbeknownst to the spreader. So when tough talkin’ Kirk “If I Die, I Die” Cousins risks infection, remember that means that he also is selfishly putting unvaccinated teammates at significant risk. If any of those players miss a game or games, or get harmed, it will very likely hurt their team. If all three of them miss games, the problem for the team could quickly become catastrophic.
So much for “team first.”
Respecting The Fans?
And then what about that “always respects the fans” standard. Even if the athlete is ignorant enough to feel safe being unvaccinated, what about the tens of thousands of adoring fans per week with whom they are sharing the buildings? You know, the elated fans, many with their risk-regulating amygdala pickled, desperate to get as close to them as possible? You know, the people who make your extravagant salary and lifestyle possible? Is knowingly putting them at risk of being maimed or killed by the deadliest virus in a century really “respecting the fans?”
“Yeah, but players shouldn’t be forced to be vaccinated,” say the athlete worshipping journalists, analysts, and fans. I hear this one a lot. That goes without saying. It’s a “straw man,” an extreme argument that virtually no one is making, but is trotted out because it’s easy and popular to knock down.
But I’m not talking about mandating vaccinations, and neither is anybody at the NFL or Centers for Disease Control (CDC). I’m just talking about doing the right thing for yourself, your loved ones, your community, your team, and your fans.
I don’t care how well they play this year, I don’t want to hear any more of the cliches about these unvaccinated athletes always putting their team and fans first. Because right now, we’re seeing what they’re really made of. Their selfish actions are speaking much more loudly than their sports cliché words.
See also the Chicago Cubs. One of 8 teams to not meet 85% mark. Unvaccinated includes cancer survivor Anthony Rizzo. Dumb.
The Twins had a pretty significant self-inflicted wound too, thanks to unvaccinated Andrelton Simmons and others. That has to create some tension in club houses.
The N.C. State University baseball team was one win away from going to the finals at the College World Series in Omaha, then was forced to withdraw when 14 of the team’s 27 players, apparently none of whom were vaccinated, tested positive for COVID-19. So much for teamwork. The team worked hard all year and hundreds of students and fans traveled to Omaha for the series. But 14 players cared more about themselves and their personal “rights” than they cared about the team or the fans. The coach commented that he was there to teach the kids about baseball, not politics. Shameful.
Really great example.
How in the world did vaccinations become about “politics?” Vaccinations are about immunology, public health, medicine, and common decency, not politics.
Years ago, it seems the anti-vaxxers used to be more likely to be hippy types, concerned about “putting un-natural things into our bodies.” Now, it seems they’re more likely to be conservatives or libertarians, concerned about “being controlled by government.”
It’s so ignorant and arrogant for both groups to think they somehow know more than a community of highly trained immunologists, molecular biologists, and medical doctors vigilantly doing large clinical trials and constantly checking each other’s work.
We have to know what we don’t know. That seems to be lost on a generation who has been led to believe a simplistic meme from a source lacking relevant expertise is all they need to know.
You would think that the kids were there because they were college students first, not nascent professional baseball players…but obviously they really are just minor league ball players, hoping to make it to the big leagues, rather than hoping to be educated….
Yes, the lads should consider “rowing the boat” to some science classes.