BIG TEN CALLS AUDIBLE, WILL ATTEMPT FOOTBALL SEASON
Less than five weeks after pushing fall sports to spring in the name of player safety during the pandemic, the conference changed course and plans to open its football season the weekend of Oct. 23-24. All 14 teams will play nine games in nine weeks; the
The Big Ten is banking on a daily testing regimen allowing its football teams to play nine games in nine weeks starting next month without spreading the coronavirus or risking heart issues for its players.
Ohio State hopes that means a return to the College Football Playoffff for the Buckeyes, who were No. 2 in the Associated Press preseason poll.
“It’s not easy for 19- and 20-year-old young men that go through this and they did,” Buckeyes coach Ryan Day said of the wait to see if the fall seasonwould be reinstated after being postponed in early August. “The culturewas nevermore evident, and I couldn’t be prouder of them.”
Ohio State president Kristina Johnson and director of athletics Gene Smith referred to the ability to use an antigen test for COVID-19 on players, coaches and staffff prior to every practice and game as the catalyst for the conference’s chancellors and presidents voting to allow football teams to start playing games Oct. 23-24.
“As you may know, my background is I’m an engineer and a scientist,” said Johnson, who offifficially took her post Sept. 1. “So when I look at the data, fifirst of all, what’s changed is that the rapid testing of a fewmonths ago, evenwhenthewholeCOVID(pandemic) started, was very accurate with regard to false negatives but not very accuratewith regard to false positives. You have to have both. We’re looking at tests now are 98, 99% accurate.”
That is important because it allows a quick turnaround compared to the more prevalent polymerase chain reaction tests that can take a day or more to process but are considered the gold standard as far as accuracy.
While PCR tests have been
widely used since early in the pandemic that hit the United States in March, speedy, accurate antigen tests have only received approval for use in the past few weeks.
“I do believewe will have clean playing fields with no athletes on those fields that have COVID,” said Johnson, who credited Smith and Day for establishing and implementing protocols for the team designed to limit the spread of the coronavirus since the team returned to campus for voluntaryworkouts in June. “Our tests have been very low — very, very low in that cohort. And as a campus, we saw initial spikes when the students cameback and it’s been consistently going down.”
Smith said he shared her confidence in being able to keep COVID off the practice and playing fields but acknowledged players are still at risk of contracting it off the field.
“No question about it, but we have a way to deal with that,” Smith said. “What’s nice about our environment is our student-athletes are self-policing. They have created a bubble for themselves, and so I’m highly confident that our team will continue to do what they’ve been doing andwe’ll work through that. But I’m hopeful that all teams in our league can minimize the number of positives they have.”
Those who have positive tests confirmed will be sidelined for at least 21 days and be monitored for myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart that is rare but can be life-threatening if not caught.
“There is aprotocol within our protocols about when they can return,” Johnson said. “When they need to get tested for myocarditis, and if an athlete who gets COVID then does express myocarditis, then they’re out for the season. So I think those sorts of things -- the detail of the work that was done over the last month -really gave comfort tomyself and my peers.”
Johnson and Smith both credited the work of Dr. James Borchers, an Alter High School graduate who is the Ohio State football team physician and served as co-chair of the medical subcommittee on theReturn To Competition Task Force the Big Ten established after postponing its fall seasons Aug. 8.
Appearing on a video conference conductedby the Big Ten Network, Borchers said the time that passed since that day allowed the medical teamto learnmore about the virus, how it can affect the hearts of those who catch it and how to monitor for potential heart damagewere all key in developing a plan to convince conference leadership games can be played this fall.
“We know that if we can test daily with rapid testing in these small populations of teams, we’re very likely to reduce infectiousness inside practice and game competitions by near 100%,” Borchers said. “We can never say 100%, but we feel very confident that with that approach we’ll be able to make our practice and competition environments as risk-free as we possibly can with this testing approach.”
Day, whowas vocal in his belief the fall season should not be scrapped in August and publicly asked lastweek why the Buckeyeswere sidelinedwhile othermajor conference schools planned to play, shared the optimism of his bosses and Borchers.
“The three things — the data-driven approach, the testing and the cardiac protocol is really excellent,” Day said. “I’m excited for the players because they never lost faith. They never lost trust, and their behavior through this time has been excellent.
“Theynever stoppedfighting, and it was during a time that was very, very uncertain, but now they get the opportunity they asked for, which was to safely compete for a championship and get back into the CFP picture. So many of them after they left the fields last year against Clemson, that’swhat they a really, really wanted.”