“Without three to six players most weekends”: NRL clubs bracing for season of mayhem

More than 100 NRL players are understood to be currently isolating with COVID-19.

Published by
Mitch Keating

NRL clubs are bracing to be "without three to six players most weekends" for the 2022 season as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to have a strong grip on the competition.

A majority of clubs are understood to currently have players in isolation as the nation battles with record case numbers, with clubs having to cancel training returns this week as players and staff have been deemed as close contacts or have contracted the virus.

The NRL is looking to best combat the rapid Omicron variant outbreak that has seen New South Wales look toward greater freedoms while recording 20,000+ cases daily.

The league has already looked to implement strict guidelines for all 480 players, but the current degree of case numbers is keeping clubs at risk of being without several key players week-on-week once the 2022 season is underway.

"We have been talking among a few of the coaches and medical staffs and we reckon we will have to be without three to six players most weekends if the current trend continues," an unnamed coach told Wide World of Sports. 

BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA - OCTOBER 03: Nathan Cleary of the Panthers and Dylan Edwards of the Panthers are seen wearing face masks before the 2021 NRL Grand Final match between the Penrith Panthers and the South Sydney Rabbitohs at Suncorp Stadium on October 03, 2021, in Brisbane, Australia. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

"That will be a combination of players who actually have COVID and those who are deemed close contacts.

"It's going to really put a strain on all clubs but this is the new world we are living in."

The Panthers, Knights and Broncos are just a handful of the clubs currently having to reshape their pre-season programs after recording positive cases within their playing groups.

The Courier Mail's Travis Meyn reports that potentially over 100 NRL players are currently isolating with the virus, leaving clubs scrambling to implement new avenues to best prepare for the new season.

The number of clubs and players that are directly impacted is expected to increase as Round 1 nears, with the NRL looking to balance personal and professional lives for their playing cohort.

The league is set to implement a strategy on its playing group that won't allow players to attend indoor venues and would be required to dine outdoors should they visit cafes and restaurants.

 

Published by
Mitch Keating