2 min read • September 17, 2020
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Chris Godwin is destined to miss the Week 2 home opener against the Panthers with a concussion. A fourth down hit Sunday by D.J. Swearinger of the Saints sent him to the sideline under his own power. The team scored before he could return, and he reportedly had no symptoms on the sidelines or on Monday or Tuesday but reported to the facility today with concerns and the Bucs are doing the right thing by being cautious. When there are delayed onset symptoms, it means the clearance to return to play will be delayed as well. The league protocol calls for a 5 step return to play protocol and there is no way anyone who has late symptoms on Wednesday can be cleared by the independent neuro by Sunday. The only slim hope is if it is determined that Godwin never had head injury symptoms at all but was placed in the protocol as an extreme precaution. In my NFL experience, I have seen players on game-day placed in the protocol and then found not to have a concussion but it would be very unusual for a player placed into the protocol three days after the game to be deemed fine. Also, consider that late developing symptoms often are associated with multi-week absences before clearance.Let's hope for a false alarm on Godwin but the fact is, a pattern of late symptoms leads to significant worry. Hopefully Evans' hamstring is improved but unlikely will be 100%. Rob Gronkowski coming out of retirement had a lackluster 2 catches for 11 yards on 3 targets. Brady and the Bucs will need Scotty Miller and TE OJ Howard to step up to notch their first victory of 2020. In Week 1, Brady had a rather pedestrian debut with the Bucs throwing 2 TDs and 2 INTs leading to a mediocre 78.4 quarterback rating. With Godwin now a late add to the concussion protocol, he will almost certainly miss at least the next game, and leave Brady with one less target to find his footing in Tampa Bay.
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