I just posted data a couple days ago - I'll let you go hunt it down and draw your own conclusions.
https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/ece0db09da4d4ca68252c3967aa1e9dd
I think someone needs a JUMP to conclusions mat. This link has 0 value when discussing how safe it is to play a contact sport at the collegiate, or any, level. It also, hilariously, refutes the idea that Nebraska is "safe" as it clearly shows infections are on the rise over the past month.
The bottom line is It is very rare that anyone under 30 even has a severe case of Covid. To take it a step further, people in excellent shape, like athletes, are at an even lower risk. The vast majority in this age class don't even get symptoms.
That's, just like, your opinion man.
Here is a quote from the Red Sox chief officer today regarding the one baseball player that made headlines, Eduardo Rodriguez- " ...the complication that he had was very mild in terms of just the severity of it."
Rob Manfred just threatened to shutdown the baseball season as early as next Monday because of the threat of COVID-19 and the difficulty to control players without a bubble.
https://mlb.nbcsports.com/2020/07/31/manfred-warns-hell-shut-the-baseball-season-down-if-players-arent-more-careful/
I don't blame the media for running with the story but it sounds like it may not have been worthy of the panic that it created.
LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL
Can you find a single severe case involving a college athlete? There has sure been a lot of positive cases but I'm not aware of a single severe case.
If we have a football season this fall I'm pretty sure I'll be able to provide plenty of examples. Once, you know, the athletes themselves announce how they are affected (pesky HIPAA and their rules against sharing patient information) or someone inevitably dies.
What do we currently know about sports in the COVID-19 pandemic?
1. Putting an entire league (NHL, MLS, etc) in a bubble works pretty damn well
2. Placing restrictions on players without removing them from society at large (hello MLB) doesn't work.
The CDC has provided guidance on sports, that full-contact sports like Football are high risk (feel free to google this, I provided the link forever ago). The NCAA says football is high risk.
Additionally, all of the evidence shows it's not a good idea to play team sports, even low contact sports like baseball, if you can't remove the players, coaches, etc from their communities. As this is something you just can't do in college, all the available information tells us it's the opposite of safe.
So, I'm sorry man but I'm not going to take your faulty conclusions over facts (covid spreading like wildfire in MLB) and guidance from experts.