This doesn't seem any different than any other area of the economy. I think the NCAA and AD's are waiting to see how "okay" people are with the virus running its course through the U.S. If we get to June and enough people don't seem to be outraged and scared about the amount of infected people and deaths, it's game on...Unfortunately option #5 is the only one supported by any logic at this point. I’d love to hear from any AD how they could possibly make 1-4 work knowing what we know now. There’s been nothing. No plan of action. It just seems as though they are prolonging this as long as they can and refuse to admit the reality of the situation.
I'd say football and many other team sports are pretty unique as far as it being impossible to proceed with any sort of distancing mitigation in place.This doesn't seem any different than any other area of the economy.
Definitely. My post was more about the attitude of many:" let's just plow through and hope for the best." It's okay to hope for the best, but a lot of people are ignoring reality at the same time.I'd say football and many other team sports are pretty unique as far as it being impossible to proceed with any sort of distancing mitigation in place.
Nebraska linebackers did a good job staying 6 ft away from ball carriers last season.I'd say football and many other team sports are pretty unique as far as it being impossible to proceed with any sort of distancing mitigation in place.
I agree. Plus people in general seem to focus on fans vs no fans at games. It annoys the heck out of me. Are coaches and players now dispensable in order to satisfy our entertainment needs?Definitely. My post was more about the attitude of many:" let's just plow through and hope for the best." It's okay to hope for the best, but a lot of people are ignoring reality at the same time.
Yeah an Iowa fan co-worker of mine reminded me of that. Sadly I had to agree.Nebraska linebackers did a good job staying 6 ft away from ball carriers last season.
This is promising, but since football is an extracurricular activity, all of this is predicated on the fact that there's a curriculum for regular students. They'd all have to be on campus, in some capacity, for football to come back.
That being said, apparently there's hope for this season:
Though we are trained from birth to believe otherwise, college football does not need to occur in autumn. This is good news, since we now know there's a distinct possibility that the 2020 college football season will finish well into 2021. It may not even start until then.
If the coronavirus pandemic demands as much, some of the game's biggest rivalries will be returning to their roots. From the Iron Bowl to Michigan-Notre Dame, from Auburn-Georgia to the Big Game, their origins lie in the winter and spring. Other prominent schools, such as USC, Ohio State, Nebraska and Texas, also played 19th-century games in the first half of the calendar.
I don't know if the main concern is lack of students on campus. I would think the bigger concern is, what do you do with a team where 1-5 people get sick and you have a utah jazz/ nets situation where a whole team is quarantined?This is promising, but since football is an extracurricular activity, all of this is predicated on the fact that there's a curriculum for regular students. They'd all have to be on campus, in some capacity, for football to come back.
That being said, apparently there's hope for this season: