Bills' Allen: vaccine decision should be personal choice

Updated Apr. 7, 2021 8:03 p.m. ET
Associated Press

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen is still debating whether to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, and believes the decision be left to a personal choice.

Allen shared his views during an

“I think everybody should have a choice to do it and not to do it,” Allen said, speaking by video from his offseason home in California.

“You get in this tricky situation now where if you do mandate that, that’s kind of going against what our Constitution says, and the freedom to kind of express yourself one way or the other,” he added. "I think we’re at a time where that’s getting a lot harder to do. I don’t know, everybody should have that choice.”

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Allen’s comments come at a time

The president also said no one should fear mutations of the coronavirus that are showing up in the U.S. after being discovered in other countries. He acknowledged that the new strains are more virulent and more dangerous, but said “the vaccines work on all of them.”

“That’s the way to beat this,” Biden said. “Get the vaccination when you can.”

At the NFL level, the league is

“We will be encouraging all personnel to get vaccinated and working with the players association on all these issues,” NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said last week. “We are also using our platforms publicly to talk about the importance of getting vaccinations.”

The 24-year-old Allen said he wants to look further into the statistical data before determining whether he’ll be vaccinated.

“I’m still debating that,” the third-year starter said. “If the statistics show it’s the right thing for me to do, I’d do it. And I’d lean the other way, too, if that’s what it said.”

In other topics, Allen weighed in on his contract status by noting he is eager for the Bills to open discussions regarding an extension.

Allen is entering the fourth year of his rookie contract, with Buffalo having until May 3 to pick up a fifth-year option on the deal for the 2018 first-round draft pick. General manager Brandon Beane hasn’t ruled out the possibility of opening talks at some point after the upcoming NFL draft.

“If they called up and wanted to talk tomorrow, I’d be willing. But we’ll see. We’ll cross that bridge when we get there,” Allen said. “I’d obviously love to be locked down in Buffalo for a very long time. It’s a place that I call home. I love being there. I love the fanbase. I love the city. Everything I want is there.”

Allen is coming off a breakout season in which he established numerous team scoring and passing records in leading the Bills to win their first AFC East title in 25 years and reach the conference championship game for the first time since the 1993 season.

Buffalo’s season ended with a 38-24 loss at Kansas City, a result which still sticks with Allen.

“Every day. I think about it all the time: where we were; where we could’ve been,” he said.

“I think it’s just another step in the gradual progression,” Allen added. "You see what our front office has done this offseason in giving us the tools to go back and be ready to compete and try to go out there and do that again.”

The Bills return mostly intact after Beane creatively opened up salary cap space to re-sign starting linebacker Matt Milano and starting offensive linemen Jon Feliciano and Daryl Williams. In free agency, Buffalo signed veteran receiver Emmanuel Sanders, who replaces the loss of John Brown, and upgraded the backup QB position with the

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