Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

No. 3 Buckeyes’ season in jeopardy

Outbreak could keep Ohio State from spot in Big Ten title game

- By Mitch Stacy

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State officials say they are unsure when the team can practice again, let alone play next week at Michigan State, after an outbreak of COVID-19 put the third-ranked Buckeyes’ Big Ten title hopes in danger.

“I have no clue what this afternoon or tomorrow will bring or next week will bring,” athletic director Gene Smith said Saturday.

Three more college football games across the country were canceled or postponed Saturday, including Florida State hosting Virginia. For the second straight week, the Seminoles had their home game called off hours before kickoff and after their opponent had already traveled to Tallahasse­e, Florida.

Last week the issue was Clemson and Florida State not agreeing on whether the game should be played after a Tigers player who was positive for COVID-19 traveled with the team to Florida.

This week, one positive test for a Florida State player returned Saturday morning led to contact tracing that left the Seminoles with only 44 scholarshi­p players.

“We deeply regret that many Florida State and Virginia fans have already traveled to the game as well as Virginia’s team,” Florida State athletic director David Coburn said.

Ohio State canceled its Saturday game at Illinois on Friday night. Across college football, 19 of the 58 games originally scheduled for this week were called off because of COVID-19 issues.

The Buckeyes’ disruption could be the most significan­t, impacting the Big Ten and national championsh­ip race.

If Ohio State (4-0) cannot play its final two regular-season games it would likely not reach the minimum number (six) required to be eligible for the Big Ten championsh­ip game. The Buckeyes had an earlier game canceled because of a COVID outbreak at Maryland.

This time Ohio State has the out

break. According to Dr. Jim Borchers, Ohio State’s team physician, the program had virtually no positive tests this season until Wednesday.

Borchers said the percentage of positive individual­s among Ohio State players and staff hit one of the Big Ten’s warning “guideposts” on Friday night, leading officials to cancel Saturday’s game at Illinois.

Borchers said that benchmark was 7.5 percent of the 170 individual­s deemed Tier 1 in the program, including players, coaches and staff. That means at least 13 people in the Buckeyes camp tested positive, although Borchers declined to provide specific numbers.

One of the positive tests was coach

Ryan Day, who wouldn’t have been on the sideline even if the team had gone to Champaign, Illinois.

Day, his voice slightly raspy, participat­ed in a Zoom call with the reporters Saturday and said: “I’m resting comfortabl­y, but I have an extremely heavy heart.”

Players who test positive have a 10-day isolation period followed by a 10-day return-to-activity period under Big Ten protocols, Borchers said. So while Day might be able to return for the Buckeyes next week at Michigan State, the players who have tested positive will miss at least one more game — if the game is played at all.

Ohio State’s final regular-season game is Dec. 12 vs. Michigan, and the Buckeyes could play another on Dec. 19 even if they are not eligible for the Big Ten title game.

The College Football Playoff has no minimum number of games required to be eligible for selection.

Ohio State has paused all football activities. Day said if the team could get back on the field by Thursday it might be able to play next Saturday.

Borchers said the Big Ten benchmark that would have forced a seven-day shutdown — 5% positives of all tests administer­ed — was not reached, so the decision to cancel Saturday’s game was made by Ohio State and was not forced. The positive tests were spread out among players and staff, with no identifiab­le clusters, he said.

“What we’re seeing in our case is kind of a community type of spread,” Smith said. “We didn’t see spikes in specific areas. Could we have played? Sure? Was it the right thing to play? No.”

 ?? Jay LaPrete The Associated Press ?? Among those on the Ohio State staff testing positive for the coronaviru­s was coach Ryan Day, who said Saturday he was “resting comfortabl­y.”
Jay LaPrete The Associated Press Among those on the Ohio State staff testing positive for the coronaviru­s was coach Ryan Day, who said Saturday he was “resting comfortabl­y.”

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