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As of Monday morning, NFL free agency was set to move ahead as planned this week, with the legal tampering period opening Monday at noon and NFL free agency officially beginning on Wednesday at 4 p.m.

At least some NFL teams are not on board with the decision, according to multiple reports, because of the coronavirus crisis.

In Peter King’s weekly NBC Sports column, he writes NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith must agree to push free agency back. The NFL is apparently placing blame on the Players Association, with King citing a source saying Smith “wouldn’t budge” on the issue.

Smith denied that suggestion on Monday morning.

An owner and two general managers King talked to “were somewhere between frustrated and furious” that free agency wasn’t going to be delayed, the owner saying it’s “tone deaf” amid the global COVID-19 outbreak.

“Tone deaf is right!” one GM told King. “The world has stopped. We’re in a national emergency as a country and we do this? It’s awful. We’re telling the rest of the world we don’t care. Can you imagine the reaction to some player signing a $60-million contract this week and that being in the headlines while thousands and thousands of people are losing their jobs because of this virus! It’s ridiculous.”

ESPN’s Adam Schefter wrote on Twitter that teams still plan to use private planes to fly in top free agents, but didn’t like that it would require pilots leaving their homes — of course, teams could speak with those players remotely to avoid that issue.

“Teams NOT happy free agency [is starting] this week,” Schefter wrote.

Fox Sports’ Jay Glazer wrote that he hasn’t “spoken to a single team executive who believes NFL free agency should begin on time.”

But as of now the show will go on, global pandemic be damned.

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