Doesn't it seem quite possible that the third wave of COVID will start hitting harder in the fall, roughly in line with the typical cold & flu season?
I'm glad a 9/05 start is projected; waiting to start the season seems like a greater likelihood of getting the back half cancelled anyway.
Doesn't it seem quite possible that the third wave of COVID will start hitting harder in the fall, roughly in line with the typical cold & flu season?
I'm glad a 9/05 start is projected; waiting to start the season seems like a greater likelihood of getting the back half cancelled anyway.
Glad to see the power 5 moving forward.The SEC just said "thanks, no thanks" to the ACC. Yesterday, the ACC announced that they would play one non-conference game, with each team playing the game somewhere in the home state of the ACC team. Presumably so Clemson-South Carolina, Georgia Tech-Georgia and Florida State-Florida would all still be played. All those games now cancelled.
I know health experts have mentioned that all along. However, it sure seems to me that temperatures and weather really don't have much to do with it. Look at the spike we are having now and we are in the middle fo the hot summer.Doesn't it seem quite possible that the third wave of COVID will start hitting harder in the fall, roughly in line with the typical cold & flu season?
I'm glad a 9/05 start is projected; waiting to start the season seems like a greater likelihood of getting the back half cancelled anyway.
Which.....basically is what I said. Hot weather doesn't stop it. So, I don't see a reason specifically why the fall weather would cause it to come back.@BigRedBuster It's not that the season doesn't have much to do with it, it's more that it's just one of several factors involved. The current wave is mostly just the continuing fallout from the rush to reopen back in mid to late May.