Will There Be a 2020 Football Season?

Chances of a 2020 season?

  • Full 12 Game Schedule

    Votes: 20 36.4%
  • Shortened Season

    Votes: 13 23.6%
  • No Games Played

    Votes: 22 40.0%

  • Total voters
    55
  • Poll closed .
I apparently somehow messed up my original response, sorry for any confusion.

So would you also take the number of current Covid deaths and X10 too?  


No, that would be ridiculous. Just look at the number of excess deaths and use that number. We can't simply just count deaths directly related to COVID-19 as not all deaths are in a hospital from a person that tested positive. Any death at home from a person that did not get a test wouldn't count towards the total.

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/04/21/world/coronavirus-missing-deaths.html

 
Last edited by a moderator:
I apparently somehow messed up my original response, sorry for any confusion.

No, that would be ridiculous. Just look at the number of excess deaths and use that number. We can't simply just count deaths directly related to COVID-19 as not all deaths are in a hospital from a person that tested positive. Any death at home from a person that did not get a test wouldn't count towards the total.

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/04/21/world/coronavirus-missing-deaths.html
Got it, that makes sense.  So, probably way more infected, probably more deaths and for sure a lower mortality rate.

 
Got it, that makes sense.  So, probably way more infected, probably more deaths and for sure a lower mortality rate.


More infected? Yes

More deaths? Yes

Lower mortality rate? Not necessarily

The only way we can know for sure is to greatly increase the amount of testing done, something the Senate and our current President want to avoid. I personally think the 10x number is WAY off, but I'm willing to admit I'm not an expert and could be wrong.

 
In before the pedantic "BUT I DIDN'T SAY IT VERBATIM"


I've been told by multiple posters on this forum (in the P&R thread) in no uncertain terms that "the death rate doesn't matter at all; the only thing that matters is flattening the curve and the burden on the hospital system."

This is why I originally made the statement. 

To the links you did provide (and thanks for doing that), combined with other anecdotal evidence/news segments, it seems people in the south are even more resistant to wearing masks. Again, I assume this is a big part of the reason for the spikes there.

 
This might offer some insight into how crowds would be impacted in stadiums (not on player-player type interactions) to help decide how reasonable it is to have fans in the stands.

https://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory/indy-500-reduce-capacity-25-percent-lift-blackout-71919976?cid=clicksource_4380645_7_heads_posts_headlines_hed

Capacity will be limited to 25% — about 87,500 fans — at the massive speedway, and tickets will be distributed to allow proper social distancing among groups.

Most concessions will consist of prepacked food. Fans will have their temperature checked upon entry and receive hand sanitizer and a mask, which they will be required to wear when they are not eating or drinking.

 
I've been told by multiple posters on this forum (in the P&R thread) in no uncertain terms that "the death rate doesn't matter at all; the only thing that matters is flattening the curve and the burden on the hospital system."

This is why I originally made the statement. 

To the links you did provide (and thanks for doing that), combined with other anecdotal evidence/news segments, it seems people in the south are even more resistant to wearing masks. Again, I assume this is a big part of the reason for the spikes there.


I think the biggest problem here is that you're focused on a trailing metric and using it to argue against leading metrics.

To decrease deaths, we need to decrease infections and reduce the strain on our health care system. Remember, there has been a significant increase in excess deaths that haven't been directly attributed to COVID-19. One reason (among many I assume) is that hospitals are overwhelmed and people cannot receive the treatments they need.

Infection rate and hospital utilization are leading metrics. We know that when they decrease, deaths decrease. But it takes several weeks for the death rate metrics to change. 

So, please tell me what it matters whether we're focusing on infections rates, death rates, or hospital capacity if all 3 correlate? Does it make sense to talk about 3 week old death rate data or up to the minute infection and hospital capacity data?

 
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