I think this is SUPER unlikely to happen.
But I think that if it wasn't a possibility, they wouldn't keep talking about it. First Frost, now Green.
There's smoke here. Definitely smoke.
If NU is able to play some games this fall, it will either look very smart (with no or few COVID cases) or look very dumb (with a COVID outbreak and mass illnesses).
Good point about players more likely contacting it in non-football activities.Yeah - but a mass outbreak isn't going to be started or caused by playing football. It will be related to players catching while doing non-football related activities, so I think it will be a bit misleading or dishonest to say football is causing an outbreak.
Also, testing of players twice a week (or at all) will likely stop and not resume until January so an accurate comparison is unlikely.
Yeah - but a mass outbreak isn't going to be started or caused by playing football. It will be related to players catching while doing non-football related activities, so I think it will be a bit misleading or dishonest to say football is causing an outbreak.
Also, testing of players twice a week (or at all) will likely stop and not resume until January so an accurate comparison is unlikely.
A big concern is sending a team who isn't testing positive to another campus, only to have infected players cause an outbreak there.
There's no good test right now. Too many false positives/negatives to be sure. That's where the liability comes from.
Student-athlete travel isn't going to be confined or stop just because there is no fall season. Instead, many student-athletes will likely visit friends at other campuses during this break. Similarly, many student-athletes will travel home, go to bars, go to parties, and engage in 'spreading' activities they would have otherwise avoided or not participated in if a fall season was in place.
Canceling football isn't going to prevent or mitigate the spread of this illness.