if they do try to play in the spring, the height of flu season, how is that safer in a dome stadium?
playing at a dome location to counter bad weather is a non starter, if fans are going to be allowed.
so you can kiss the spring season good bye.
this will be a continuing mess for months on end.
Shatel has been doing this since the 1990s. He's one of the main reasons I've never gotten a print subscription to the OWH. Jeff Sheldon's work with the VB team earned them my digital subscription, but you can't pay me to read Shatel's ramblings.
It kills me how well-regarded he is among Nebraska sports journalists. Same with Barfknecht.
Yep. Absolutely can't take a plan for a January start seriously. And Nebraska won't be playing any games this fall.
There are only two main questions that loom for me right now:
1. Will any other conferences actually play some games?
2. Will the public settle into an agreement that COVID is endemic and thus the B1G agrees to play a full season next year, or will the fear of liability be just as great next August as it is now?
Also, even if it does become endemic by next fall there will likely be more tolerance for the virus because immunity levels will be higher, treatments will be more advanced, testing capacity will be much increased, a potential vaccine still exists and we'll have a much better understanding of the virus. Also, I don't think the consensus is that it becomes endemic for sure. A lot of the latest research is suggesting there may be longer term immunity to the virus than previously thought and even immunity from other coronavirus infections providing protecting.
I agree with all of this, and to the bold I posted here about the article in the research paper 'Cell' about T-cell immunity. I'm in the camp of saying we need to protect the vulnerable and simultaneously attempt to go back to normal.
But after seeing how so many people have been fear-mongered this year I'm not taking anything for granted and I'm not counting on common sense winning the day as far as football is concerned even for the 2021 season.
That could easily be an overly pessimistic take, but that's where I'm at.
Sean Callahan who's Husker coverage I love and will still follow has been enjoying his time grabbing the low hanging fruit as well. He was looving the Karen Warren narrative. That and his weekly 'Covid update'. Woof.
I believe that Green said something about thinking an October start was possible if the other three conferences are playing successfully at that point. So, I don't think games this fall is completely out, but unlikely nonetheless.
Was there a vote to postpone fall sports in the Big Ten? University of Nebraska-Lincoln Chancellor Ronnie Green confirmed that a vote did take place in an interview with KLIN on Wednesday.
Green’s comments came shortly after Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren released an open letter. While Warren’s letter did not say much about the vote, he did say it took place among the Big Ten Council of Presidents and Chancellors and that it “was overwhelmingly in support of postponing fall sports and will not be revisited.” Green confirmed the vote.
“As that decision was made, it was the Council of Presidents and Chancellors that made that decision,” he said.
While the vote was not unanimous—and Green would not confirm who voted in what way—he did say “it was an overwhelming consensus.” Nebraska, however, did feel ready to play.
"We were very clear on that,” Green said.
Could the Big Ten change its mind in October if other conferences are able to move forward? Maybe, but there are currently no plans. In fact, when asked directly if Green thought whether or not Nebraska would play football this fall, he wasn’t confident in it happening.
"I think the odds of that are very low, but we're in uncharted territory,” Green said.
Green confirmed that Coach Scott Frost is on the Big Ten's Return to Competition Taskforce. Athletic Director Bill Moos is on a subcommittee that handles scheduling. The coaches and athletic directors have been working on scheduling options in the Big Ten for winter and spring since last week.
While he put to rest the rumor that a group of five or six Big Ten programs might put together a schedule for fall without the rest of the conference, he did appear optimistic about a January restart. Word started circulating on Wednesday about the potential of an eight-week schedule in the Big Ten that would begin in January.
"The big question initially was how are we going to have players compete in two seasons in one year?” he said. “. . . There's a growing level of enthusiasm [a winter season] could work."