Last Wednesday, Aaron Rodgers, future Hall of Fame quarterback for the first-place Green Bay Packers, tested positive for Covid-19. This fact, in and of itself, might be newsworthy because of who he is, but in and of itself it's not earth-shattering. That is, it's not earth-shattering news until you couple it with the fact that: (1) it appears Rogers is not fully vaccinated against Covid-19; and (2) in August, when a reporter asked if he had received the Covid-19 vaccine, Rodgers said, "Yeah, I've been immunized."
"Immunized," in this case, however, appears to mean something very different than fully vaccinated against Covid-19.
How do we know Rodgers isn't fully vaccinated? Because he told us.
The NFL has not mandated that players receive the Covid-19 vaccine. It has, however, established a strict set of protocols — which Rogers, in his online rant, called draconian and shame-based — for unvaccinated players to follow. Players that are not fully vaccinated, for example:
- Must be Covid tested every single day.
- Must wear masks at all times while in their team's facility, at the stadium on game days, and while traveling. During games, however, active players (those in uniform and eligible to play) who are unvaccinated can remain unmasked.
- Must remain physically distant from others while in their team's facility.
- Otherwise cannot gather in a group of more than three players, coaches, and other members of the football operations staff.
- Must quarantine after a high-risk Covid exposure.
- Must be physically distanced in the meal room and cannot eat with teammates.
- Cannot leave the team hotel to eat in restaurants, and further cannot interact with anyone on the Team Traveling Party during team travel.
* Image by All-Pro Reels, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons