Los Angeles Times

UCLA players plan to keep working to better conditions

Guidry and Ogbonnia are committed to effecting change despite season’s status.

- By Ben Bolch

If plans to salvage fall college football collapse this week, the season either pushed to the spring or canceled entirely, it won’t mark the end of two UCLA players’ efforts to enhance what they see as a game on a different sort of brink.

Elisha Guidry and Otito Ogbonnia say the movement they helped champion to protect Pac-12 athletes amid a once-in-a-century pandemic will endure regardless of whether the next game is played in September, March or August 2021.

“I think the NCAA and some of these conference­s have been exposed with the lack of leadership,” Ogbonnia said Monday afternoon during a half-hour Zoom meeting with The Times. “Ultimately, I think that might drive people to do things that have never been done before with college football.”

Ogbonnia and Guidry are part of a group of more than a dozen Pac-12 players pressing the conference for improved safety protection­s from the novel coronaviru­s as well as an equitable chunk of the profit pie, threatenin­g to boycott practices and games through the #WeAreUnite­d movement if their demands aren’t met.

Their concerns have become overshadow­ed the last few days by a growing cacophony of cancellati­ons. First, the Mid-American Conference said it wouldn’t play this fall, followed by the Mountain West Conference. The Pac-12 presidents and chancellor­s are scheduled to meet Tuesday to discuss the matter, less than a week before the date the conference had set as a possible start of training camps under optimal conditions.

If there’s no fall football, both Ogbonnia and Guidry said they would be in favor of playing in the spring.

“This amount of time away from football I don’t think is necessaril­y healthy for anybody, just from an athlete standpoint and a societal standpoint, so I would definitely want their continuing having football in the spring if that was possible and I think it is possible,” said Ogbonnia, a defensive lineman. “We have time to plan for that if that’s the case and hopefully by the spring if there’s a vaccine or the cases go down substantia­lly, it will just be a lot safer regardless of any protocols or guidelines.”

Guidry suggested that playing in the spring would allow Pac-12 officials to meet with counterpar­ts from the NBA, WNBA and NFL to mimic their safety strategies, realizing a bubble environmen­t would not be possible at the college level. But increased, uniform testing should be mandated before the next game, the players said.

“If you can’t procure tests,” Ogbonnia said, “you’re kind of [preparing] for it to be a train wreck this season and nobody wants that.”

The players said the Pac-12 has not responded since they sent a letter to Commission­er Larry Scott, ripping him for the way he handled the initial meeting between the conference and the group of players demanding change. Guidry, a defensive back, said the players’ ask of half of conference revenues remained on the table but had taken a backseat to concerns about COVID-19 and eligibilit­y with the Sept. 26 season opener approachin­g.

Guidry said there was no disconnect between the #WeAreUnite­d and #WeWantToPl­ay movement that emerged after the threat of widespread cancellati­on became imminent over the weekend.

“It’s not like we don’t want to play,” said Guidry, a defensive back. “We just want to play safe. There’s a lot at risk, especially amid a pandemic when the numbers are actually higher than when we stopped doing spring ball.”

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