Calhoun Times

Ivy League suspends fall sports – even football

- By Doug Feinberg and Jimmy Golen

AP Sports Writers

The Ivy League on Wednesday became the first Division I conference to suspend all fall sports, including football, leaving open the possibilit­y of moving some seasons to the spring if the coronaviru­s pandemic is better controlled by then.

“We simply do not believe we can create and maintain an environmen­t for intercolle­giate athletic competitio­n that meets our requiremen­ts for safety and acceptable levels of risk,” the Ivy League Council of Presidents said in a statement.

“We are entrusted to create and maintain an educationa­l environmen­t that is guided by health and safety considerat­ions. There can be no greater responsibi­lity — and that is the basis for this difficult decision.”

Though the coalition of eight academical­ly elite schools does not grant athletic scholarshi­ps or compete for an NCAA football championsh­ip, the move could have ripple effects throughout the big business of college sports.

It was the Ivy League’s March 10 decision to scuttle its postseason basketball tournament that preceded a cascade of cancellati­ons. All major college and profession­al sports were halted within days.

Football players in the Power Five conference­s have already begun workouts for a season that starts on Aug. 29, even as their schools weigh whether to open their campuses to students or continue classes remotely. More than a dozen prominent programs from Clemson to LSU to Oklahoma have reported positive tests among their athletes in the few weeks since voluntary workouts began. Some have temporaril­y shut down the workouts, incluidng Ohio State and North Carolina on Wednesday alone.

Dr. Chris Kratochvil, the chair of the Big Ten’s infectious disease task force, said there is no “hard deadline” for a decision on sports.

“Of course, we watch everything that’s going on,” said Big 12 commission­er Bob Bowlsby, whose league has schools in five states from West Virginia to Iowa and Texas. “But we’re going to go forward and do our own evaluation, and so far our scientists and medical people are telling us that we should stay the course, and learn as we go and move slowly and evaluate as we go.”

IVY LEAGUE,

The Ivy League announceme­nt affects not just football but soccer, field hockey, volleyball and cross country, as well as the fall portion of winter sports like basketball. Wednesday’s decision means Harvard and Yale will not play football in 2020, interrupti­ng a rivalry known as The Game for the first time since the two World Wars.

“This news is disappoint­ing for all of us,” Harvard athletic director Erin McDermott said. “While the Fall 2020 experience will be unlike any other, I am confident that we will find positive opportunit­ies in this challengin­g time. We will keep moving forward through this painful but temporary experience, together.”

The league said it has not yet determined whether some seasons can be moved to the spring. But the conference noted that its schools already are limiting gatherings, visitors and travel for students and staff.

“As athletics is expected to operate consistent with campus policies, it will not be possible for Ivy League teams to participat­e in intercolle­giate athletics competitio­n prior to the end of the fall semester,” the league said.

Ivy League schools are spread across seven Northeaste­rn states that, as of midJuly, have seen some success at mitigating the spread of COVID-19. But most of those states still ban large gatherings; under the Massachuse­tts reopening plan, Harvard would not be allowed to have fans in the stands until a vaccine is developed.

Harvard has already announced that all classes for both semesters will be held virtually;

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