Titans add Corey Davis to reserve/COVID list

The Titans got terrible news this morning as reports that two more players tested positive from Tuesday’s round of COVID testing. Now we know that one of those players was wide receiver Corey Davis, per Jim Wyatt.

Regarding reports from Wednesday morning that a second Titans player had tested positive, Tom Pelissero says now that the results of that second test are being considered “inconclusive.”

Davis is the Titans leading receiver through three games, catching 15 passes for 206 yards and a touchdown. His loss is massive, not only because he’s a talented and important part of the Tennessee offense, but also because fellow wide receivers Adam Humphries and Cameron Batson have already preceded him on the reserve/COVID list.

That leaves A.J. Brown — expected to return from a bone bruise in his knee that sidelined him in Weeks 2 and 3 — along with Kalif Raymond, Nick Westbrook-Ikhine, and practice squad receivers Chester Rogers and Cody Hollister as the available players for Sunday’s game against the Bills (if it is played).

How are players still testing positive after being sent home from the facility and asked to quarantine eight days ago? Our own John Glennon has the answer here from the CDC:

COVID has been such a widespread pandemic mostly due to this phenomenon: you can be carrying and spreading the disease for days before testing positive or showing any symptoms. That’s why teams are asked to wear masks and practice social distancing — among many other strict guidelines — while in the facility despite daily testing.

Of course, there is now an alternative explanation for the continued positive tests… player-organized workouts that took place away from the team facility last week after the league shut the Titans down, as reported by Paul Kuharsky.

Obviously, this is a horrible look for the Titans. The only potential saving grace would be if these workouts took place prior to the league explicitly telling them not to get together under any circumstances. That’s a weak loophole, but it beats active defiance of an NFL mandate.

What happens with the Titans-Bills game?

This game is now very much in question again, and unlike last week, there is no “easy” schedule solution. The Titans have already had their “bye” so any postponement would push the season out to a Week 18 (which the league probably should go ahead and consider a reality at this point).

The game also can’t simply slide back to Monday or Tuesday like the league did with the Patriots-Chiefs game last week. The Bills are scheduled to play the Chiefs on Thursday Night Football in Week 6. Maybe you could push that game to Friday or Saturday if you had to, but you’re talking about multiple reschedules at that point, not just one game.

There is still a possibility that the league decides to press forward with the game on Sunday as currently scheduled, though we’ve now crossed over the threshold where any “normal” week of preparation for the Titans is out the window. Usually, Wednesday would be their first full practice of the week, followed by practices on Thursday and Friday with a walk through on Saturday.

Following today’s test results, today’s potential practice is obviously cancelled and it’s hard to see the league letting them back in the facility on Thursday even if today’s test results come back clean tomorrow. So will the league be comfortable letting the Titans play an important AFC game after having just one practice in the past two weeks?

Moving the game back to Week 18 would seem to be the best case scenario for the Titans, but who knows what the league will decide to do at this point. My guess is that they exhaust every possible avenue to play this game as scheduled, even if that means throwing a depleted, rusty Titans squad to the wolves on Sunday.

Who is on the reserve/COVID list?

The Titans currently have 12 total players on the reserve/COVID list:

  • LS Beau Brinkley
  • OLB Kamalei Correa
  • CB Kristian Fulton
  • WR Adam Humphries
  • WR Corey Davis
  • DL DaQuan Jones
  • DL Jeffery Simmons
  • OL Isaiah Wilson
  • WR Cameron Batson*
  • TE Tommy Hudson*
  • CB Greg Mabin*

*practice squad

The Titans also have had 10 team personnel members test positive. Based on reports, we know that there are coaches included in that number beyond the one name we know out of this group: outside linebackers coach and defensive playcaller Shane Bowen.

We should note that Isaiah Wilson has officially been on the COVID list for a month now and is not included in this outbreak. It was sounding like he was nearing a return prior to the facility getting shut down last week.

When can infected players return?

I wrote at length about the return to play protocols that were agreed upon by the NFL and NFL Players Association last week and you can read that here. Essentially, the big variable is the presence of symptoms. Some people who get COVID-19 never demonstrate any actual symptoms — one of the reasons the virus has been so hard to track — and the players that fall into that category can return to practice once they pass three hurdles:

  1. At least five days have passed since initial positive test.
  2. Player produces two consecutive negative tests at least 24 hours apart.
  3. Receive clearance from the team’s head physician.

The players that fall into the asymptomatic category would all have a chance to play against the Bills — even fullback Khari Blasingame, who tested positive on Saturday (reported on Sunday) — if they can clear the virus from their system. Of course, five days is the minimum so do not assume that asymptomatic means an automatic five-day return.

Players that do show symptoms have a longer road to return. Those players must clear all of the following criteria to return to the facilities:

  1. At least ten days have passed since symptoms appeared.
  2. At least 72 hours have passed since player last experience symptoms.
  3. Approval from team’s head physician.

And after returning to the facilities, players who exhibit symptoms must then pass through additional cardiac screening and a minimum three-day progressive exercise protocol before getting cleared to participate in a game.

That means that players with symptomatic cases will require at least 13 days to pass from the time they initially begin showing symptoms and their first game back. In some cases, symptoms do not show up until after a positive test so it’s entirely possible that we see players miss up to three or four weeks of action depending on timing of the positive test and when symptoms appear.

We do not know how many of the ten recent cases are symptomatic versus asymptomatic and we likely will not know until guys start getting activated from the reserve/COVID list. We could see a few guys get added back onto the roster in time to play against Buffalo, but there is also a pretty decent chance that the Titans are without all ten. It’s simply impossible to project.

Author: Mike HerndonAfter over 20 years of annoying his family and friends with constant commentary about the Titans, Mike started writing down his thoughts in 2017 for Music City Miracles. He loves to dive into the All-22 tape and highlight the nuanced details that win and lose football games. You can now find his tape breakdowns and Anthony Firkser love letters at Broadway Sports. Mike also spends time laughing at Lebowski and yelling at Zach on the Football and Other F Words Podcast.

Comments

  1. So i guess the question is when the players were informed not to participate in group activities outside of the team facilities. If the rules did not prevent this, then I don’t know how they can levy fines or penalties. Does anyone know when we will get this information or have more light they can shed on this?

    I know I am biased for the Titans, but it seems like everyone is waiting for the smallest infraction to pass judgment simply because they’re so mad about the outbreak. COVID outbreaks should have been expected when the season began, and you want people to follow protocol first and foremost. But this is a very contagious disease that even broke into the most protective bubble on the planet being President Trump’s inner circle.

    Until we learn that protocol has actually been broken, I don’t know why people and media pundits want to talking about the hell we’re about to pay before knowing whether we did anything wrong. Give it a few weeks and I think we will see even more teams dealing with this issue. I hope whatever penalty that comes down on us is evenly applied across the league to all other teams with similar infractions. Otherwise I think Robinson and the Titans will have a good chance to call the discipline against us to “set an example” as being “capricious and arbitrary” in violation of NFL disciplinary rules.

  2. This was ballsy by PK honestly. He get’s the big story yes. But when you add in his snarky retweet of Saffold’s post, I wouldn’t be surprised if he gets blacklisted by the players. I’ve been a subscriber of his site since day 1 and players/coaches have generously given him a substantial amount of access over the years, but this might affect that. Reminds me of when he broke Logan Ryan’s trust last year and lost that relationship.

  3. Players still testing positive could be due to a lot of reasons. Everyone wants to put their own agenda on it, but the simple reality is that there is a pandemic effecting everyone in the world. Tennessee’s number of cases continue to climb and without a strict bubble, each Titan family member would need to follow strict protocols to eliminate any and all risk.

    As far as the Buffalo game – As much as I want a solution to be fair to the Titans, at this point if they continue to test positive they shouldn’t travel. If they can’t travel, they should forfeit (unless the NFL has another suitable option in place). If the Titans can travel, they play Sunday with whoever is healthy and available. It may not be fair, but this is COVID season. Something the NFL should have been better prepared for…

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