Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

College sports on edge as SEC battles virus

- BEN FREDERICKS­ON

Anyone who knows anything about both college football and covid-19 realized this season was going to get messy.

And now, officially, it is. Messy because the thought of playing through the pandemic forced us to realize there was no good answer. It didn’t really feel right to ask unpaid athletes to play through a pandemic like profession­als. But at the same time, it didn’t really feel right to stop them if they wanted to, especially when a lost college football season after a lost March Madness would have resulted in lost programs, scholarshi­ps and jobs.

Messy because, logistical­ly, the notion of football players and coaches not getting and giving a wildly contagious airborne virus to one another was as unrealisti­c as the assumption college students were not going to pass the virus around like a beer pong ball when campuses around the country repopulate­d. The virus doesn’t care whether it crashes a fraternity party or a football practice. People seem to forget that.

Regardless, the chaotic landscape college football looks out upon this weekend is concerning. The SEC, the predominan­t league in the sport and the one most dedicated to seeing through its season, finds itself in an undesirabl­e position. It is squarely in the eye of the covid storm.

The SEC enters today with a game between Missouri and Vanderbilt postponed due to a covid outbreak among Commodores; a game between Florida and LSU postponed due to a covid outbreak among Gators; and the biggest game of the weekend and perhaps the season — No. 3 Georgia at No. 2 Alabama — overshadow­ed by the news that both legendary Crimson Tide Coach Nick Saban and his athletics director, Greg Byrne, have tested positive for covid. Of course, a second test came back negative for Saban, so who knows?

Right about now would have been the perfect time for conference­s that elected not to play this fall to stand up and announce at the SEC’s expense that they were not the alarmists their critics claimed. The problem for those conference­s, however, is that they caved and rolled out plans for a fall season. Plans that included no open weeks to reschedule games postponed for covid-related reasons.

The Big Ten and the Pac-12 can’t look down at the SEC. Not when they’re just looking ahead at their future.

The SEC’s football slogan is, “It just means more.” That’s very true now. The football conference’s recovery from this covid stiff-arm, or lack thereof, will send ripples across the college sports landscape. There isn’t a conference that will fight harder and dedicate more resources to moving forward than the SEC will to keep football on the field. If it tries and fails, what will work?

Another question: Is this working?

The postponeme­nts created by Florida and Vanderbilt pushed the number of covid-related postponeme­nts in Football Bowl Subdivisio­n games to 30-plus.

For every team taking the virus seriously, there is another taunting it, mistaking good luck for proof a season won’t be slobberkno­ckered by an outbreak. The latest example should enrage SEC Commission­er Greg Sankey. Florida Coach Dan Mullen was whining about his stadium not being able to hold as many fans as other venues while the Gators were on a road trip that included players who had not reported troubling symptoms.

Sankey and SEC athletic directors spent a lot of time this week reminding us the league was prepared for something like this. It’s why the strict testing policies are in place. It’s why programs that operated outside of the league’s rules could be penalized through conference dollars withheld. It’s why open weeks were baked into the league-only schedule. It’s time to be the right combinatio­n of flexible, diligent and calm, all at once. It’s time to find out if the SEC can get up and press on.

College sports during the pandemic was always going to be messy. But if it gets so messy the SEC can’t help but punt, that’s big in a bad way.

It just means more, indeed.

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