The NFL Physicians Society is discontinuing physicals for players amid the coronavirus pandemic, the group told both the league and its players association, according to a letter obtained by NFL Network.
The decision will likely affect free agents who are awaiting physicals to officially sign contracts with new teams, as well as draft prospects whose health issues potentially need to be rechecked by teams after last month’s NFL scouting combine.
In the letter, NFLPS president Dr. Anthony Casolaro said the suspension of physicals will last “until the health crisis has passed.”
“We believe it is not in the interest of the players nor team medical staff to continue to perform these physicals,” Casolaro wrote, according to the NFL Network.
Casolaro is also the head Redskins physican,
“At a time of the most serious pandemic in our lifetime, we believe medical resources should focus on those who are ill or in need of care,” he wrote.
Casolaro added that official team physicals will resume “when it is appropriate to do so.”
Free agents and draft prospects already had been affected by the coronavirus.
Physicals for free agents have been delayed due to travel logistics, which is why teams couldn’t officially announce player signings on social media when the new league year opened Wednesday. The NFL did give teams the option to conduct a physical with an independent doctor, as Tom Brady did with Tampa Bay.
And draft hopefuls have been prohibited from “all in-person, predraft visits.”