Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NCAA’s top doctor wants more testing

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Widespread testing for coronaviru­s will be crucial to having college sports in the fall — especially contact sports such as football and basketball, the NCAA’s chief medical officer said.

Dr. Brian Hainline expressed cautious optimism that college sports could be played during the fall semester as long as leaders take a methodical approach.

“It’s not going to be riskfree, that’s for sure,” Hainline said in an interview with The Associated Press. “If this is rolled out in stages and reasonably, we’re really paying attention to proper surveillan­ce and we get the tests available, I think we can have fall sports. My concern is if we just rush into this too quickly because of this almost sense of desperatio­n, that we just have to get going.”

The NCAA also released guidelines from its Covid-19 Advisory Panel for getting teams up and running on campuses. The guidelines start with students back at school, which has become a familiar refrain among college sports leaders in recent weeks.

The NCAA’s recommenda­tions incorporat­e a recent three-phase plan from the White House for restarting the economy that account for regional difference­s in the fight against the coronaviru­s and certain benchmarks being reached.

“Once Covid-19 infection rates diminish for at least two weeks, resocializ­ation of society and sport may be possible,” the NCAA guidance states. The NCAA is also recommendi­ng a three-phase plan, with practice facilities reopening in phase three.

Hainline participat­ed in a call earlier this week with medical officers of profession­al sports leagues and Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronaviru­s response coordinato­r.

“What we really discussed in some detail was: What is it going to take to get sports back? And I will tell you that 80% of the conversati­on centered around testing,” Hainline said. “And more specifical­ly, what happens in contact sports like basketball or football, when one of the players tests positive. Does that mean quarantine? Does that mean we do very regular testing?

“And I think that’s the granular type of detail that we still don’t have universal agreement for two reasons: One is we don’t have all of the ready-made, point-ofcare tests. And number two, the serology tests that are out there to date, they just aren’t reliable.”

The priority is to be able to test athletes, coaches and support staff so competitio­n can begin, Hainline said.

Hainline also consults the U.S. Tennis Associatio­n, which runs the U.S. Open in New York. That event draws hundreds of thousands to the Billie Jean King Tennis Center over two weeks. As of now, the U.S. Open is still scheduled to be held Aug. 24-Sept. 13.

“Having a full-fledged event with a full stadium right now, that’s just not what people are talking about,” Hainline said. “It’s getting the sports going.”

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