Lake County Record-Bee

STUCK ON HOLD

While some sports can proceed in purple-tier counties, most will have to wait for red or orange status under new guidelines released by state public health officials

- By Darren Sabedra

SACRAMENTO >> Football, volleyball and other popular high school sports will remain on hold until at least Jan. 25 as cases of the coronaviru­s continue to surge in the state, according to new guidance released by the California Department of Public Health on Monday.

The state’s four-tier coronaviru­s tracking system underpins the long-awaited guidance for when outdoor and indoor youth and recreation­al adult sports can resume. “High- contact” outdoor sports such as football and soccer can only be played in counties that are in the orange, or moderate, tier. As of Monday, 54 counties, including the nine that make up the Bay Area, were in the purple, or widespread, tier; three were in the red, or substantia­l, tier; and one was in the orange tier.

The guidance defines high-contact sports as team sports with frequent or sustained close contact between participan­ts and high probabilit­y that respirator­y particles will be transmitte­d between participan­ts; moderate-contact sports as team sports that can be played with only incidental or intermitte­nt close contact between participan­ts; and low-contact sports as individual or small group sports where contact within six feet of other participan­ts can be avoided.

Inter- team competitio­n will not be allowed in the state until Jan. 25 at the earliest, according to the guidance.

Justin Alumbaugh, head football coach at De La Salle High School in Concord, wasn’t surprised to see his sport on the lower end of the return-to-play classifica­tion.

“A lot of that makes sense,” Alumbaugh said in a telephone interview. “It’s going to be a challenge, but at least it’s doable. Now we’re given something that we can work with. That was something that we were really, really, really needing and we got it.”

“Now it’s up to us to start implementi­ng what’s going on,” Alumbaugh said. “It’ll be interestin­g to see what the CIF (California Interschol­astic Federation) does with this — if they have to move (sports) around.”

Indoor basketball faces a tougher challenge. It was placed in the yellow, or minimal, tier. The guidance states that indoor sports are higher risk than outdoor sports because of reduced ventilatio­n.

Sports that can be played in the purple tier include cross county, golf, swimming and diving, tennis, and track and field.

The guidance also includes directives to wear face coverings, remain six feet apart as much as possible, clean and sanitize equipment before use, and limit indoor sports venue capacity (25 percent in the orange tier and 50 percent in the yellow tier).

Physical conditioni­ng, practice, skill building and training are allowed outdoors, with six feet of physical distancing, and within stable cohorts, regardless of county tier status, according to the guidance.

CIF officials and commission­ers from the governing body’s 10 sections plan to meet Tuesday to discuss the guidance and presumably a plan moving forward.

“I would hope that we have some guidance to each of our individual sections by the end of this week in regards to that meeting,” said Central Coast Section commission­er David Grissom, who oversees an area stretching from King City to San Francisco. “It’s very preliminar­y to say anything. But I am encouraged that the state has put out some guidance.”

When the CIF announced over the summer that high school sports would be delayed until at least December, it reduced its calendar from three seasons (fall, winter, spring) to two (winter/spring and spring/early summer).

The first season was to include traditiona­l fall sports such as football, water polo and volleyball. But given the new health guidelines, a calendar overhaul might be necessary to get those sports in. “I’m glad that we have them,” Pat Cruickshan­k, commission­er of the North Coast Section, said about the guidance. “That’s a positive step. Now we’ve got to decide what we’re going to do with them. Got some meetings tomorrow, talk with our leadership, and see where we go from there.

“Hopefully we’ve got the word out that we can get back to it. But people have to take care of their business,” added Cruickshan­k, whose section extends from Alameda County to the coastal side of the Oregon border. “I’m glad that we have them,” Pat Cruickshan­k, commission­er of the North Coast Section, said about the guidance. “That’s a positive step. Now we’ve got to decide what we’re going to do with them. Got some meetings tomorrow, talk with our leadership, and see where we go from there.

“Hopefully we’ve got the word out that we can get back to it. But people have to take care of their business,” added Cruickshan­k, whose section ex tends from Alameda County to the coastal side of the Oregon border. “Wear masks and social distance and do the right things so our kids can have their sports back.”

 ?? PHOTO BY BRIAN SUMPTER ?? Cross country was given the green light to proceed under new state health guidelines issued late Monday for high school sports, which is good news for senior Isaac Rascon (above, right) and his Middletown High School teammates.
PHOTO BY BRIAN SUMPTER Cross country was given the green light to proceed under new state health guidelines issued late Monday for high school sports, which is good news for senior Isaac Rascon (above, right) and his Middletown High School teammates.
 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF TRETT BISHOP ?? Under the state’s new health guidelines, playing football may not be option for counties that find themselves in the purple or red tiers based on COVID-19 criteria.
PHOTO COURTESY OF TRETT BISHOP Under the state’s new health guidelines, playing football may not be option for counties that find themselves in the purple or red tiers based on COVID-19 criteria.

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