Cole Beasley helps unvaccinated NFL fan skirt Bills' COVID rule by giving him free tickets to a road game



Buffalo Bills wide receiver Cole Beasley has been a lightning rod for controversy ever since he pushed back against the NFL's COVID-19 protocols when the league introduced the restrictions back in June. Beasley called the NFL's COVID rules "crazy" in the summer and said the "players association is a joke" for agreeing to the NFL's terms that are "not for the players." Now, Beasley is sure to stir the pot with his latest decision to give an unvaccinated NFL fan free tickets to road games in a way to skirt the Bills' COVID regulations at home games.

The Buffalo Bills announced on Tuesday that proof of COVID-19 vaccination is a requirement to gain entry to home games at Highmark Stadium. For the home games on Sept. 26 and Oct. 3, fans will be required to furnish proof of at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. Starting on Oct. 31, Bills fans will need to be fully vaccinated to see their team play at Highmark Stadium. Children under the age of 12 do not need to be vaccinated, but are required to wear a face mask. A negative coronavirus test is not an option.

"We've worked collaboratively with the county over the last several weeks, months, all throughout the pandemic," Ron Raccuia, the vice president of Pegula Sports and Entertainment, which owns the BIlls, said. "We are looking to provide the safest environment for our fans that we possibly can. We're thankful for this collaboration. We feel like this is the right move going forward."

The Bills become the fourth NFL team to require proof of vaccination to attend home games, joining the Seattle Seahawks, Las Vegas Raiders, and New Orleans Saints.

Some Bills fans strongly objected to the vaccine mandate. Two unvaccinated fans voiced frustration over the new vaccine mandate since they had already purchased tickets for future games when only vaccinated people would be allowed to go to Bills home games.

"Sad day for me as a Buffalo fan," a Bills fan said on Twitter. "I was bringing my 10 year old daughter to her first game in December all the way from Albuquerque. Already bought tickets. I won't get the shot so now I don't know what to do. I probably need to sell the tickets and find an away game."

Beasley responded to the Bills fan in New Mexico by offering the fan free tickets to an away game.

"If you find an away game you are able to go to then I will buy the tickets for you guys," Beasley replied. "DM me names and every thing snd [sic] I'll figure out the best way to make it happen. Wish she could witness the mafia!"

The Bills fan, Chris Hauquitz, told the Buffalo News that Beasley was working on getting him tickets to the Oct. 10 game in Kansas City.

"I've had Covid, so in my opinion, I've already got the antibodies," Hauquitz said. "I think they're just as good as the vaccine. The vaccine came out pretty rushed. I don't really know all the information. In my opinion, there's so little information out there and it all seems to be one-sided. And then, personally, my religious beliefs. I think God created me for a purpose. He has a plan for my life. And whether I have the vaccine or not, I'm taken care of."

Beasley previously said it is his "personal choice" as to why he decides not to get the COVID-19 vaccine. In June, the slot wide receiver said, "That means I don't have to explain to anyone why I do what I do. Just like everything else in my life."

Another Bills fan was disappointed to see the vaccine mandates implemented at home games, and Buffalo long-snapper Reid Ferguson offered him free tickets to an away game.

"Well damn. Was so excited to see the @BuffaloBills play at home for the first time ever, especially being from Nebraska. But I guess the new rules for the stadium will keep me out. I guess I'll have to watch @SnapFlow69 from the parking lot if I even go to Buffalo now," the fan wrote on Twitter, and tagged Ferguson on the tweet.

Ferguson replied, "I hear you brother. If you can find your way to an away game this year, tix are on me."

Bills player pans NFL by posting mask fine letter on social media: 'Pray for me,' 'They got me!'



Buffalo Bills wide receiver Isaiah McKenzie panned the NFL on Thursday by posting on social media a letter he received from the league about his failure to wear a mask inside team facilities. In the caption of the post, McKenzie shrugged off the fine and jokingly asking fans to "pray" for him.

"They got me! NFL you win!" the wideout wrote in a tweet.

He later added, "$14,650 damn ... Pray for me."

What are the details?

McKenzie, as an unvaccinated player, is required to wear a mask at all times while inside team facilities under the NFL's new stringent COVID-19 protocols for the 2021-2022 season.

And league officials aren't messing around, either. Based on the league's letter to McKenzie, they have eyes everywhere and are meticulously monitoring suspected violations.

"On August 25, 2021, at approximately 2:15 p.m. while walking through the indoor fieldhouse and into the training room, you failed to wear a mask," wrote NFL Deputy General Counsel Lawrence P. Ferazani.

"Then at approximately 4:35 p.m. on August 25, for several minutes, you again failed to wear a mask in the meeting area of the weight room while gathered near other players after the offensive meeting," he continued.

$14,650 damn 🙏🏾Pray for me 😁 https://t.co/rIFkYgV7gJ

— Isaiah McKenzie (@_IsaiahMcKenzie) 1629982030.0

Ferazani noted that McKenzie had been warned before about the consequences associated with his failure to wear a mask.

"By letter dated July 27, 2021, you received a written warning for refusing to wear a mask and were specifically advised that 'future violations of the Protocols will result in increased discipline, including for conduct detrimental,'" he wrote. "Still, as noted above, you again refused to wear a mask at the club facility."

The league official then reminded McKenzie that his conduct "potentially compromised not only [his] safety, but also the safety of others."

What's the background?

The league's strict protocols, intended to pressure players to get a coronavirus vaccine by subjecting unvaccinated players to a litany of burdensome rules, have been controversial since their inception earlier this year.

The protocols have been a subject of controversy perhaps especially in Buffalo, due to star slot receiver Cole Beasley's public opposition. Beasley railed against the rules in June, calling them "crazy" and arguing they effectively amount to a vaccine mandate.

McKenzie has been supportive of his teammate, saying at the time, "I see you out there fighting brotha love it."

Beasley, along with three other unvaccinated Bills players, was forced to enter the NFL's mandatory quarantine this week despite testing negative for COVID-19. He had come in contact with a fully vaccinated team trainer who contracted the virus.

Bills' Cole Beasley, unvaccinated, forced to quarantine after testing negative for COVID —  because he came in contact with fully vaccinated trainer who had the virus



Buffalo Bills wide receiver Cole Beasley, an outspoken opponent of the NFL's aggressive pro-vaccine rules, has entered the league's COVID protocol after coming in close contact with a team trainer who tested positive for the virus.

Beasley has since tested negative for the virus. The trainer who tested positive was fully vaccinated.

What are the details?

The news, which broke Tuesday, ignited a flurry of criticism for Beasley who this summer made headlines for his forceful opposition to the league's stringent COVID-19 rules which teeter near the edge of being a full-blown vaccine mandate.

"Actions have consequences," Deadspin writer Donovan Dooley wrote. "Beasley made his bed now he has to lay in it for five days." He referred to the star wideout as "Buffalo's anti-vax idiot."

But the development, far from proving Beasley's imprudence, may serve to highlight just how nonsensical are the league's COVID-19 protocols.

Beasley, along with three other teammates — including fellow wide receiver Gabriel Davis and defensive tackles Star Lotoulilei and Vernon Butler — were sent home Tuesday due to their close-contact designations.

All four players tested negative for the virus Tuesday but nevertheless were forced to enter the five-day re-entry process as mandated by the NFL. League protocols require unvaccinated players who come in contact with an infected person to quarantine for five days with daily testing.

More details: The Bills' trainer who tested positive was fully vaccinated. Beasley was in close contact with him ye… https://t.co/0DrO4ZIHLY
— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) 1629816002.0

Two other teammates, linebackers Matt Milano and A.J. Klein, were also reportedly sent home Tuesday out of precaution. But after an investigation, their designations as close contacts were reversed.

Bills General Manager Brandon Beane said, "This is our new normal. It's not the normal we like. But it's the world we're in."

"We're not exempt from any of this, as we've said many times. We're going to try to keep our building as safe as we can. Everyone understands the protocols and the rules," he added.

Why does it matter?

The story has gained significant traction due to Beasley's public opposition to the league's vaccine push.

In Beasley's case, he's catching flack because he's unvaccinated. But it's ironic that his forced quarantine is not the result of his infection; rather, it is the result of a vaccinated individual's infection — though it should be noted that Beasley could soon test positive for the virus, depending on the incubation period.

In essence, the NFL's new guidelines divide players into two groups. But instead of the two groups being COVID-positive and COVID-negative like one might expect, the groups are vaccinated and unvaccinated.

At times, it's unclear whether the rules are there to protect the health of players and staff or whether they are intended as a mechanism to punish the unvaccinated.

Whitlock: With its COVID protocols, the NFL is implementing ‘Medical Jim Crow’ and Joe Biden loves it



Let's see if I understand modern-day Jim Crow.

Requiring a government-issued ID to vote is the newest form of racial bigotry terrorizing black people. According to Democrats and corporate media, people of color struggle to obtain legal forms of identification, and therefore any attempts to mandate IDs to vote is an act just short of physical intimidation at the voting booth.

No one has offered any proof that enthusiastic, would-be black or brown voters are being turned away at the polls because they lack a suitable government ID. If anyone has seen one of these disappointed voters interviewed on television or in a print publication, please tweet me a link to the story at @whitlockjason.

To the best of my knowledge, "Jim Crow 2.0," as our current president calls it, is a victimless crime.

But for the sake of this column, I'm going to accept Biden's assertion that a simple requirement such as an ID can be analogized to 1920s-style segregation laws.

So what should we call what's going on in the National Football League? America's pastime is tactically requiring its players and coaches to get the COVID vaccination to play this season. The players and coaches who don't get the vaccine are subject to rules and standards vaccinated NFL employees are not. Unvaccinated players who breach COVID protocols, including being caught not wearing a mask, will be fined $14,000 per infraction.

Let's follow the established logic. Approximately 75 percent of NFL players are black. Data has revealed that black men are the most reluctant Americans to take the experimental vaccines. Democratic Party and corporate media have spent at least the past five years telling black Americans to distrust the country's "systemically racist" government. Couple the anti-American sentiment with the well-known, 40-year Tuskegee Syphilis Study that exploited black men and it's not difficult to understand black men's hesitancy to take the experimental vaccine.

The NFL's COVID policing is going to make New York's old stop-and-frisk policing program feel like the Emancipation Proclamation and Juneteenth rolled into one.

What we're looking at is a clear case of what Fox News host Tucker Carlson appropriately labeled "Medical Jim Crow."

COVID rules are going to disproportionately and negatively impact black NFL players. The NFL is a microcosm of what's going to happen to the rest of American society. Black men will be disproportionately damaged by COVID restrictions in all American workplaces.

This is Joe Biden's 1994 crime bill all over again. We don't need to wait 20 years to recognize who the COVID protocols will hurt.

This should be a wake-up call to black men in particular and black people in general. Quit assuming your true allies call themselves Democrats, liberals and social justice activists. They are not our allies. They're clever hunters who repeatedly walk us into situations that don't benefit us.

I have to tip my hats to Democrats. They've convinced us that political allegiance is superior to religious allegiance. Voting is a religion. They've persuaded us to believe that our ancestors sacrificed their lives for our right to vote. And they're quite adept at disguising their racism.

ESPN and social media wanted to make Buffalo Bills slot receiver Cole Beasley the face of the anti-vax movement. Beasley is white. He began tweeting his disapproval of COVID protocols months ago.

This week, Arizona receiver DeAndre Hopkins and Tampa running back Leonard Fournette added their public objections. Hopkins and Fournette are black. I knew it would just be a matter of time before black NFL players raised their hands and voices in objection to the COVID rules. We can't be cowards and sheep forever.

I don't have a position for or against the vaccine. Everyone should be allowed to make a personal decision that fits their situation. I'm against the government and the NFL forcing and/or pressuring individuals to consent to any medical procedure.

All the people allegedly concerned with saving vulnerable lives get real quiet when you bring up abortion. Keep that same quiet energy when it comes to the COVID vaccines.

Greg Couch: Yee-haw! NFL stars Cole Beasley and DeAndre Hopkins are rootin’, tootin’, tweetin’ anti-vax cowboys



Everyone has taken a side now in the COVID vaccine debate. In the past few days the NFL, which is serving as a microcosm of America, has begun to feel like an old Western movie. Only instead of the setting being a dusty field with Clint Eastwood and his adversaries holding twitching fingers over their holsters, this battle is taking place in America's new Wild West: Twitter.

Not long ago, it seemed like the COVID debate was starting to wind down. Instead, it is just now coming to a head.

The NFL players are on one end of the street, as Thursday was tweet-and-delete day. Players reacted angrily — and then had second thoughts — to a league memo laying out rules that pressure them into getting the vaccine. Roughly, if teams can't play a game because they have too many positive COVID tests, and a certain number of those tested haven't gotten the vaccine, then their team could forfeit the game and no one on either team will be paid.

Arizona Cardinals receiver DeAndre Hopkins was the first star to react on Twitter: "Never thought I would say this, But being in a position to hurt my team because I don't want to partake in the vaccine is making me question my future in the @nfl."

He later deleted that and wrote "Freedom?"

So players are fighting on Twitter, the NFL is laying down heavy-handed rules, and the media — including woke influencer Jemele Hill — have fired away.

And the funny thing is that the arguments are all blowing by each other like tumbleweeds in the breeze. One faction is arguing science, another is arguing freedom of personal choice, another is arguing about business and the economy. There is no cross-section. And there is just way too much noise out there and no one is actually listening — only stating their entrenched opinions.

The players are in a tough spot because they think someone is trying to force them to do something they don't want to do with their health, which they consider a personal decision. The league is a business, making business decisions, and doesn't want to lose games, meaning tickets sold, meaning TV viewers.

And Hill responded on Twitter to Hopkins this way:

"So a vaccine that's proven to be wildly effective and protects people against a potentially deadly virus will get a NFL player to retire but not the threat of imminent brain trauma that they expose themselves to every game. Got it."

No, it seems as if she doesn't get it at all. Do you see? Hill is arguing science while some of the NFL players are arguing personal choice and individual freedom regarding their health and bodies.

Their arguments are passing in the breeze.

Does Hill actually not see the disconnect in her own tweet? NFL players, now with knowledge of CTE and brain trauma, feel they're making a personal choice to play a sport they know is dangerous to them. They want the same personal choice about injecting something into their bodies.

And when Hopkins suggested he might retire rather than take the jab, he wasn't talking about his health. He was talking about the feeling that he should have the right to make his own decisions.

From my end, it seems that the anti-vax argument isn't even about the vaccine, but about the American right to individuality. Don't tell me what to do. Don't tell me you know better. Don't tell me you're smarter than me. Don't try to take control of my body by forcing me to put something in it.

The problem is, this isn't an individual issue. It's a community issue.

Former Dallas Cowboys receiver Michael Irvin got things going a few days ago when he talked about NFL rules that teams with 85% of their players vaccinated will have a competitive advantage this season. Why? Because under NFL rules agreed to by the players' association, vaccinated teams will have fewer restrictions in practices and meetings.

So Irvin ripped into the Cowboys and, in theory, any team that hasn't met the 85% threshold, as not doing all they can to win football games.

"Jimmy [Johnson, Irvin's former coach in Dallas] made that abundantly clear," Irvin said, according to ESPN. "And not being one of the [vaccinated] teams says there's other things to a great number of people on this team that are more important than winning championships. And that makes me worried."

In came the NFL's original anti-vaxxer, Bills receiver Cole Beasley, on Twitter:

"I'll get vaccinated and be an advocate for it if Pfizer puts a percentage of its earnings from the vaccine in my wife's name," he tweeted recently.

I guess the point is that Pfizer isn't in this to save the world, but only to make a buck. The question I have is this: What is Beasley in this for? I'm not asking why he's playing football. The question is why he has chosen a second career as anti-vax influencer, claiming that common sense leads him to the conclusion that the vaccine is some sort of plot against human freedoms?

Mark Cuban does understand the platform and fully understands its weight and responsibility. So he argued back at Beasley through Twitter: "I'll tell you what Cole. You get vaccinated and promote vaccination on all your social, I'll buy your wife a share of Pfizer stock. It pays a 3.78% dividend. That way she is getting a percentage of Pfizer's earnings. Deal?"

Beasley tweeted back at Cuban that he doesn't want his money and wasn't being "literal."

So it's just some sort of exercise for fun? Because that seems like a dangerous game to me, though that might just be the Bill Gates microchip in my head doing the talking.

There is no point in arguing for or against the vaccine any more. We are officially done. There are no arguments left to be made. We all know all of them by now. What we don't know is how all this COVID bickering is going to impact what happens on the fields and courts.

A New York Yankees-Boston Red Sox game was postponed when six Yankees failed a COVID test. Athletes keep showing up in Tokyo for the Olympics only to be turned away because they have COVID.

In fact, earlier this week, an Olympics official wouldn't rule out the possibility that the Olympics might still be canceled if enough athletes show up with COVID.

Let's get back to the tweetin' and deletin' in the Wild West.

"Vaccine I can't do it," Tampa Bay running back Leonard Fournette tweeted ... then deleted.

"The NFLPA F---ing suck," New England linebacker Matt Judon tweeted.

But their anti-vax leader, Beasley, said nothing has changed. He's free:

"If you're scared of me then steer clear, or get vaccinated. Point. Blank. Period. I may die of covid, but I'd rather die actually living."

Clint Eastwood couldn't have said it better.

Buffalo Bills player Cole Beasley reacts to COVID vaccine backlash, says he's prepared to quit football: 'My values are more important to me than a dollar'



Buffalo Bills wide receiver Cole Beasley railed against the NFL's new and very rigid COVID-19 protocols for training camp and the preseason. Beasley proclaimed that he is prepared to walk away from the NFL, "My values are more important to me than a dollar."

The NFL and NFL Players Association agreed upon new COVID-19 protocols, which are far more critical of unvaccinated players than those who are fully vaccinated. Unvaccinated players will face daily COVID-19 tests, must wear a mask in the team facility and during travel, and are barred from leaving the hotel to eat at a restaurant. First violations of the NFL's COVID-19 protocols can result in a $50,000 fine.

Some NFL players voiced their displeasure with the new restrictions as well as the NFLPA. One of the more outspoken players against the strict rules is Beasley, who on Thursday called the restrictions "crazy" and said the NFLPA is a "joke."

There was swift backlash to Beasley's opinions on the NFL's COVID-19 rules, to which he responded to his critics with an even more powerful stance against the new restrictions.

Beasley began his response captioned by declaring, "Hi, I'm Cole Beasley, and I'm not vaccinated!"

"I will be outside doing what I do. I'll be out in the public. If (you're) scared of me, then steer clear, or get vaccinated. Point. Blank. Period," he tweeted on Friday. "I may die of COVID, but I'd rather die actually living."

"I have family members whose days are numbered," Beasley said in response to the NFL's rules that prohibit players from having more than 15 people at their home," Beasley added. "If they want to come and see me and stay at my house then they are coming regardless of protocol."

Beasley, who has two years and roughly $11.9 million remaining on his contract with the Bills, seemed to hint that he is willing to quit or be fired from the NFL over his COVID-19 vaccine stance.

"I don't play for the money anymore. Fine me if you want," Beasley stated. "My way of living and my values are more important to me than a dollar."

"I'll play for free this year to live life the way I've lived it from Day 1," Beasley said. "If I'm forced into retirement, so be it. I've enjoyed the times I've had ... So either way, it's a win-win."

"I'm not going to take meds for a leg that isn't broken," he wrote on Twitter. "I'd rather take my chances with COVID and build up my immunity that way ... That is my choice based on my experiences and what I think is best."

"I love my teammates and enjoy playing ball because all the outside BS goes out the window in these moments," Beasley continued. "I just want to win the Super Bowl and enjoy these relationships that will be created along the way."

"Thank you for everyone who has been supportive throughout this process," the wideout said.

Beasley said, "a lot of other NFL players" agree with his position on coronavirus vaccinations, but "aren't in the right place in their careers to be so outspoken."

"I'm hoping I'm doing my part to represent you guys well," the second-team All-Pro wide receiver concluded.

Public Service Announcement https://t.co/XjQicdvnKm

— Cole Beasley (@Bease11) 1624044800.0

Fellow Bills receiver Isaiah McKenzie reacted to Beasley's impassioned message, "I see you out there fighting brotha love it."

A @Bease11 I see you out there fighting brotha love it 😄✊🏽

— Isaiah McKenzie (@_IsaiahMcKenzie) 1624040307.0

In May, Beasley emphasized, "I don't have a problem with anybody getting the vaccine. That is your choice. My problem is everyone is ridiculing and bullying people ... into getting one or thinking the same way about it. It's becoming that way with any issue. This is not OK."

Last month, In May, Bills general manager Brandon Beane answered a hypothetical question about unvaccinated players, which he revealed that he would be inclined to cut an unvaccinated player if it helped the franchise reach an NFL threshold to relax COVID-19 restrictions. However, the NFL reportedly informed Beane that the team could not release a player solely due to his vaccination status.

In 2020, Beasley caught 82 receptions for 967 yards, both career highs.

Players blast NFL's strict new COVID-19 vaccine protocols, call players association 'a joke'



The NFL unveiled its new COVID-19 protocols for training camp and the preseason this week, which puts heavy restrictions on what unvaccinated football players are allowed to do. The strict coronavirus restrictions were agreed to by the NFL Players Association, which frustrated several professional football players.

The NFL released its COVID-19 protocols Wednesday, which dictates that coaches and staff must be vaccinated, but players have the option. However, unvaccinated NFL players are severely restricted, while vaccinated players have far more freedoms and return to near pre-pandemic rules.

  • Unvaccinated players will need to be tested for COVID-19 every single day, while those who are vaccinated will not.
  • Unvaccinated players will need to wear face masks at the facility and during travel, while vaccinated individuals will not.
  • Unvaccinated players will have travel restrictions, while vaccinated people will not.
  • Unvaccinated players are not permitted to leave their hotel rooms to get food from a restaurant and are not allowed to interact with anyone outside of the team, while there are no restrictions on vaccinated players.
  • Unvaccinated players must practice social distancing when eating, while those vaccinated are not required to do so.
  • Unvaccinated players are barred from the sauna and steam room, while vaccinated players are permitted to use these facilities.
  • Unvaccinated players have weight room capacity limits, while vaccinated individuals do not.
  • Unvaccinated players will lose out on extra income since they will be banned from social/media/marketing/sponsorship activities, while vaccinated players are permitted to do so.

"Individuals who are not fully vaccinated, including players, will be prohibited from gathering outside club facilities or team travel. NFL players who are not fully vaccinated will be barred from going to nightclubs, bars, house parties, concerts, etc," the league stated.

Players are prohibited from house gatherings of more than 15 people unless all participants are wearing PPE.

Failure to follow the new rules could result in fines of $50,000 for a first offense.

The NFL has made it clear that unvaccinated players will have a much tougher time in the preseason than those who have received the coronavirus vaccine.

The NFL and NFLPA have agreed to updated COVID-19 protocols for 2021 training camp and preseason, per source. How… https://t.co/nsbBChECYX

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) 1623866986.0

Some players have already voiced their displeasure at the constraining new rules set by the NFL and NFL Players Association.

Buffalo Bills wide receiver Cole Beasley called the new regulations "crazy," and blasted the NFLPA.

"This is crazy. Did we vote on this? I stay in the hotel. We still have meetings. We will all be together," Beasley wrote on Twitter. "Vaccinated players can go out the hotel and bring covid back in to where I am. So what does it matter if I stay in the hotel now? 100 percent immune with vaccination? No."

"So what are we really talking about? I understand completely why the NFL is doing this," he tweeted. "It gives them back the freedom to make the most money as possible again if everyone is vaccinated. But will anyone fight for the players or nah?"

"The players association is a joke. Call it something different. It's not for the players," Beasley continued. "Everyone gives me the 98 percent of people who are vaccinated don't get covid again. The odds of me getting in the NFL and playing for 10 years are lower than that and I'm here."

Beasley was asked why he didn't want to get vaccinated, to which he responded, "Why does it matter what my reasons are? It's a personal choice. That means I don't have to explain to anyone why I do what I do. Just like everything else in my life."

This is crazy. Did we vote on this? I stay in the hotel. We still have meetings. We will all be together. Vaccinate… https://t.co/ty1biAGSV3

— Cole Beasley (@Bease11) 1623957620.0

Cincinnati Bengals running back Joe Mixon also slammed the NFL Players Association for heavily restricting players who didn't want to get vaccinated.

"The @NFLPA is not for the players they act like they represent us and they clearly show us different time & time again," Mixon tweeted.

"I thought Football was a team sport and it's clearly being individualized by beliefs," he added.

Mixon clarified that he is not against vaccines or anyone who wants to get vaccinated, "I love everybody and I show love to everyone vaccinated or not. I RESPECT EVERYBODY who decides to get the vaccine or not. I'M NOT AGAINST EITHER! I WILL FIGHT & DIE FOR A RESPECTED DECISION."

The @NFLPA is not for the players they act like they represent us and they clearly show us different time & time ag… https://t.co/t6JHEkZbrh

— ⚡️Primetime!!!⚡️ (@Joe_MainMixon) 1623876062.0

An NFL agent told ESPN that 60% of his clients are fully vaccinated.

Of the NFL's 32 franchises, 16 teams have 51 or more players who are vaccinated against COVID-19, according to NFL Network's Tom Pelissero.

Washington Football Team coach Ron Rivera estimated 50% of his players have gotten the coronavirus vaccine, and noted that a few more plan to get vaccinated after the team brought in an infectious disease professor from Harvard to talk to players about the COVID-19 vaccine.

One Washington Football Team player who was not persuaded to get the vaccine was defensive end Montez Sweat.

"I'm not a fan of it," Sweat said of the coronavirus vaccine on Wednesday. "I probably won't get vaccinated until I get more facts and that stuff. I'm not a fan of it at all. I haven't caught COVID yet so I don't see me treating COVID until I actually get COVID."

Unvaccinated fans are allowed to attend training camps, but must practice social distancing and remain more than 20 feet from players and team staff.