The NFL will look very different when Chiefs and Texans kick off in Kansas City

This new season will feature some fans in the stands, Tom Brady in Tampa, expanded playoffs and the "Washington Football Team."

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By David K. Li

Under smoke-filled skies in the West and with the coronavirus still raging across America, the National Football League asks: Are you ready for some football?

The NFL kicks off its 101st season Thursday night when the Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs welcome the Houston Texans to a sparsely filled Arrowhead Stadium.

The 8:20 p.m. ET contest, televised on NBC, will look and sound different from any other in recent memory.

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws as quarterback Jordan Ta'amu watches during a training camp practice in Kansas City, Mo., on Aug. 27.Charlie Riedel / AP

The Chiefs will allow only a smattering of socially distanced fans into their stadium, long regarded as one of the NFL's loudest and most raucous. Because of the coronavirus, only 17,000 spectators — largely a lucky pool of season ticket holders — will be the stands, about 22 percent of Arrowhead's capacity of more than 76,000.

The last time Kansas City coach Andy Reid could remember stalking sidelines in front of so few fans was in 1985 as an assistant at San Francisco State University, then an NCAA Division II program. The college no longer fields a football team.

"If we were playing UC Davis, we would have that. But it's been a while," Reid said. "They had the ultimate jump ball just to get into the stadium. However, that was picked. So I know they'll be revved up and ready to go."

The rest of Week 1 will kick off Sunday, and fans will see games that will look totally foreign to any ever played before this season.

That empty feeling of fans

The Chiefs are among only a handful of teams planning to allow any paid spectators.

Fanless games will look particularly jarring when the Las Vegas Raiders, the Los Angeles Rams and the Los Angeles Chargers play in their glimmering, brand new stadiums.

SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif., on Sept. 4. SoFi Stadium hosts its first game Sunday as the Los Angeles Rams take on the Dallas Cowboys. The new stadium, the largest in the NFL, can hold up to 100,000 people.Harry How / Getty Images

The Rams play host to the Dallas Cowboys on Sunday (8:20 p.m. ET on NBC) at sparkling SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California. The Rams' housemates, the Chargers, get their first chance to play at empty SoFi Stadium, against Kansas City, a week from Sunday.

This season will be the Raiders' first in Las Vegas, and their home opener at Allegiant Stadium is set for "Monday Night Football" on Sept. 21 against the New Orleans Saints.

The New York Giants and the New York Jets, playing in America's largest metropolitan region, have no immediate plans to allow any spectators into 10-year-old MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

The San Francisco 49ers are scheduled to open the season Sunday against the visiting Arizona Cardinals, but league officials are keeping a close eye on air quality in the Bay Area, which has been severely compromised by raging wildfires.

San Francisco coach Kyle Shanahan this week compared the setting to an apocalyptic state straight out of "The Book of Eli."

Benched by coronavirus

More than five dozen NFL players opted out of the 2020 season because of concerns over the virus, which has killed more than 190,000 people in the U.S.

Kansas City offensivelineman Laurent Duvernay-Tardif, a medical school graduate, is among those taking the season off. He is spending the fall working at a long-term care facility in his native Canada in hope of treating elderly patients most at risk of COVID-19.

Spending twilight years in Florida

All-time great quarterback Tom Brady will lead the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in what will be a strange sight for even the most casual NFL fan.

Brady, 43, broke into the league in 2000 with the New England Patriots and led the franchise to nine Super Bowls, winning six of them.

He signed with Tampa Bay in March and, despite a couple of odd bumps in the off-season road, will open his Bucs career Sunday against another all-time great quarterback, Drew Brees, and the Saints.

Black Lives Matter and the NFL

Dallas running back Ezekiel Elliott said he expects some players on his team to kneel for the national anthem this season in protest of police brutality and systemic racism. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has long taken an emphatic anti-kneeling posture.

It's not clear how the Black Lives Matter movement will materialize in other manners this season, but the social justice push will surely have an increased presence in the league in which Colin Kaepernick once played.

The nation has taken a renewed look at systemic racism since the death of George Floyd in the custody of Minneapolis police on May 25. A Black Lives Matter flag flies over the 49ers' home, Levi's Stadium, in Santa Clara, California.

Hail to the Washington Football Team

The Washington Football Team will play under that generic moniker after announcing in July that it would remove its name, which had long been identified as racist toward Native Americans.

Washington hopes to have a new name by the 2021 season.

The Chiefs this offseason also announced that they would ban fans from wearing faux-Native American headdresses or offensive face paint to home games.

Fewer fans, more playoffs in 2020

This will be the first season of a new playoff format that will include 14 teams in the postseason tournament, up from 12.

The eight division winners, four in each conference, will qualify along with six wild-card entrants, three each in NFC and the AFC.

The first weekend of postseason play will include 12 teams — all contending clubs, minus the No. 1 seed in each conference — and they will play down to six survivors. The remaining teams and the top two seeds will play for two more weekends to determine who plays in Super Bowl 55, which is set for Feb. 7 at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida.

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed.