Albany Times Union

Sidelined

Powerful conference­s pull plug on fall season, cite risks from coronaviru­s

- By Ralph D. Russo

Ohio State celebrated a conference title in December, but repeat hopes will wait as the Big Ten and Pac-12 postpone their 2020 college football seasons

A crumbling college football season took a massive hit Tuesday when the Big Ten and Pac-12, two historic and powerful conference­s, succumbed to the pandemic and canceled their fall football seasons.

Five months almost to the day after the first spikes in coronaviru­s cases in the U.S. led to the cancellati­on of the NCA A basketball tournament­s, the still raging pandemic is tearing down another American sports institutio­n: fall Saturdays filled with college football.

“This was an extremely difficult and painful decision that we know will have important impacts on our student-athletes, coaches, administra­tors and our fans,” Pac-12 commission­er Larry Scott said. “We know nothing will ease that.”

Despite pleas from players and coaches in recent days to play on, 40 percent of major college football teams have now decided to punt on a fall season, a decision that will cost schools tens of millions of dollars and upends traditions dating back a century.

Both conference­s cited the risk of trying to keep players from contractin­g and spreading the coronaviru­s when the programs are not operating in a bubble like the NBA and NHL are doing. They also cited the broader state of the pandemic in the United States, which has had more than 5 million cases of COVID-19.

“Every life is critical,” firstyear Big Ten commission­er Kevin Warren told the AP. “We wanted to

make sure we continuall­y, not only in our words but in our actions, do put the health and safety and wellness of our student-athletes first.”

Two smaller conference­s, the Mid-american and Mountain West, had already announced the uncertain move to spring football. The decisions by the deep-pocketed Big Ten and Pac-12, with hundred million-dollar television contracts and historic programs, shook the foundation of college sports.

What’s next?

The Southeaste­rn Conference and Atlantic Coast Conference released statements expressing cautious optimism. The Big 12 was quiet, but a person familiar with the conference’s discussion­s told The Associated Press the league was continuing to work toward playing in the fall. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the conference was not planning to make its internal discussion­s public. The Big 12 has still not released its revised schedule.

Outside the Power Five conference­s, the American Athletic Conference, Conference USA and Sun Belt made no immediate moves.

“Everyone is going to make their independen­t decisions and I certainly respect our colleagues,” Scott said. “We try to be very collaborat­ive, communicat­ive with our peers across the country. But at the end of the day, our presidents and chancellor­s looked at what was in the best interest of Pac-12 student-athletes based on the advice and frankly what’s going on in our communitie­s.”

The Big Ten said it was postponing all fall sports and hoping to make them up in the second semester. An hour later, the Pac-12, the Big Ten’s Rose Bowl partner, said all sports would be paused until Jan. 1, including basketball.

Players around the country were stunned. Many had recently taken to social media with the hashtag #Wewanttopl­ay. Ohio State star quarterbac­k Justin Fields was among those trying to present a unified front and save their season.

After the announceme­nt, Fields simply posted to Twitter: “smh,” short for shaking my head.

Less than a week ago, the Big Ten — which includes perennial powers such as Ohio State, Michigan, Nebraska and Penn State — had released a revised conference-only football schedule it hoped would help it navigate a fall season filled with potential COVID-19 disruption­s.

Even after the Big Ten made its call, there were diverging thoughts about how it should have proceeded.

Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith said he would have liked to have pushed back the season from Sept. 5 to maybe early October.

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 ?? Michael Conroy / Associated Press ?? Ohio State quarterbac­k Justin Fields was among those trying, and ultimately failing, to preserve the college football season.
Michael Conroy / Associated Press Ohio State quarterbac­k Justin Fields was among those trying, and ultimately failing, to preserve the college football season.

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