Also, I have a friend who told me that he personally thinks we will have to just bite the bullet for all sports until the fall of 2021.
tell us about this friend.
Also, I have a friend who told me that he personally thinks we will have to just bite the bullet for all sports until the fall of 2021.
There should be plenty of testing by then so if one person tests positive, they should be able to quarantine that one person and test everyone else right away. Right now people around someone who tests positive needs to self quarantine because they cant just go take a 5 minute test real quick. If what I say is right, it won't be whole teams forfeiting. It will just be random players sitting out here and there. Of course, as fast as this spreads, that one player could potentially give it to a bunch of other players before they get tested on saturday. Maybe test everyone mid week too?
A football/baseball double header on a warm spring Saturday might be kind of fun.
I've written and talked about it on the pod, but what I've gathered from Barta and KF is that a football season will be played between now and the end of the next fiscal year, June 30, '21. They need to do that for budgetary purposes if at all possible.
you don't want to know what he said about you personally, you might squirt some tearstell us about this friend.
Jamie Pollard talked with the DMR the other day and said ISU might allow fans in suites but not the stands.
Pollard and his staff have begun to work on plans for how football could have fans in attendance while still following social distancing, starting with the possibility of allowing fans in suites.
“You can slowly start to talk your way through that and say, I think we could,” Pollard said. “They’re isolated in their suite. There are ways to do food — pregame, packaged, no servers. Can’t leave your suite other than to go to the bathroom. People in the suites are pretty much people that you probably are already associated with anyways.
“By doing that you save roughly $3 million you don’t have to give back.”
LINK
Here is this post I made the other day. It appears that the NCAA will decide.........Andrew Downs and I dove into this topic on the new podcast I just posted.
Who is making the decisions? Is it the NCAA? Is it conferences? Is it individual schools?
Too many knowns right now to accurately predict, IMO.
Andrew Downs and I dove into this topic on the new podcast I just posted.
In summary, we'd just be guessing at this point on when and how it returns.
You mentioned different models and scenarios. Each day it seems we hear more possibilities.
I really think time will tell. It's hard to know what July and August will look like with the virus in the middle of May. And it will look differently depending on what part of the country you live in.
Who is making the decisions? Is it the NCAA? Is it conferences? Is it individual schools?
Too many knowns right now to accurately predict, IMO.
This was the first time I've heard any official of any university speak that specifically about the order in which they would consider welcoming fans back. Very interesting to think in terms of the economic impact of letting in only high end donors. How much would it be if only suites were occupied at Kinnick?
My concern is if given the green light then what happens when struck with adversity as the season progresses? What happens from a competitive standpoint if a program gets hammered by virus midseason and can't compete for two weeks or a prolonged period of time? Do they forfeit those games? What happens to opponents who are unable to play that team the following week? What risks would it pose to the athlete/program to return to competition after prolonged periods of time during the season (or possibly preseason) if it were to affect the majority of a team? How would programs respond to the possibility of having to travel to another school that had a flare up and had to cancel the following game(s)?
I simply struggle with how you put a plan in place at this point when there is so little information out there to help prepare you, and then how do you react on the fly.