Albuquerque Journal

Can they play?

Virus numbers put Lobo football team’s season opener in jeopardy

- BY GEOFF GRAMMER JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

The hope, without question, for the New Mexico Lobos is to open their 2020 football season at Colorado State next Saturday as planned.

That reality, however, is the opener at CSU and for that matter even the Oct. 31 game against San Jose State scheduled to be played without fans in Albuquerqu­e are in serious jeopardy as the record-setting week of new COVID-19 cases in New Mexico has dropped the program, through no fault of its own, out of compliance with the written guidelines set forth by state health officials.

And it’s not just football. Men’s and women’s basketball at both UNM and New Mexico State have shut down full contact team practices after the NCAA’s first allowable full day of practice on Wednesday. (The NCAA allows 30 practices before the Nov. 25 opener.)

“University athletics being able to safely conduct team activities is dependent on both the school’s adherence to stringent criteria designed to prevent any potential virus spread and the program existing in a safe environmen­t, i.e. a county in which COVID-19 rates are not dangerousl­y and prohibitiv­ely high,” said Nora Meyers Sackett, Press Secretary for Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, in an email.

On Friday, the state reported a record 819 new COVID-19 cases in New Mexico — breaking several records set in consecutiv­e days and leading to tighter public health code restrictio­ns starting Friday.

UNM halted Thursday and Friday’s football practices on its own after eight players and one assistant coach tested positive in the program’s first positive COVID-19 tests since Aug. 28. Thursday, independen­t of the team’s positive tests, the state informed UNM it needed to shut down team activities until further notice.

That message that also was relayed

to NMSU’s basketball teams, which had practiced Wednesday and Thursday without state approval.

Lobo football had hoped to return to practice on Saturday, but that was not approved by the state as of Friday night.

The “COVID-Save Practices for Intercolle­giate Sports” manual — one universiti­es must agree to before being allowed to veer from the state’s public health order that would otherwise restrict full-contact practices or group limits of 10 people — states practices and games are a no-go if its county of residence has a 14-day COVID-19 case average higher than 8 per 100,000 or a positivity rate higher than 5%. On Friday, Bernalillo County’s positivity rate was 4.7% but its 14-day case average was 14.1. For Doña Ana County, home to NMSU, the numbers were worse: 9.2% and 25.5.

And neither county seems likely to be in compliance in the next week, at least.

“We are still working daily with the Governor’s Office and all state officials to do whatever we can to safely get back on the practice field and prepare for next week’s (football) game,” UNM athletic director Eddie Nuñez said Friday.

NMSU has posptoned football until spring. It acknowledg­ed it had practiced basketball without approval, but plans to meet with the state’s Higher Education Department officials on Monday to try to arrive at an agreement to practice, like UNM football and basketball had done.

Meanwhile, both schools have begun to explore options for their teams, possibly even busing players to neighborin­g “green” counties with acceptable numbers — Valencia County for UNM and Otero County for NMSU.

That may not fly with the Governor’s Office.

“The state has worked overtime to find a way to enable college athletics to happen safely, establishi­ng stringent protocols that would allow them to do so, but college athletics are not the number one priority, public health is,” Meyers Sackett wrote. “Anyone who cannot understand that should take a long look in the mirror. New Mexico is facing an unpreceden­ted public health crisis and I hope university athletic directors share our concern for the public’s wellbeing, including their employees and students.

“If a university team were to purposeful­ly attempt to go around the criteria agreed to by them and the state, they would be conducting themselves in violation of the public health order, resulting in serious consequenc­es.”

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 ?? NEW MEXICO STATE PHOTO ?? New Mexico State men’s basketball coach Chris Jans celebrates his team’s 2018 WAC title. The team had been practicing without state permission.
NEW MEXICO STATE PHOTO New Mexico State men’s basketball coach Chris Jans celebrates his team’s 2018 WAC title. The team had been practicing without state permission.

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