Los Angeles Times

More preps with return of games

- By Eric Sondheimer

With football teams preparing to play, check our expanded coverage each Monday.

Official high school football practices began Friday in Los Angeles and Orange counties for teams that received approval from their schools and districts under updated youth sports guidelines. Water polo and soccer also started.

If last year was like no other in state high school sports history, this spring promises to be no different. Football in March and April. Basketball who knows when? Overlappin­g schedules everywhere. As part of a regular feature in the coming weeks, Times high school columnist Eric Sondheimer will answer reader questions to make sense of it all.

You can reach — and follow — Sondheimer with your questions at his Twitter account, @latsondhei­mer. Here are today’s reader questions:

What happens if there’s a positive test for a prep athlete?

The California Department of Public Health is supposed to come out with procedures and protocols for weekly testing of football and water polo coaches and athletes required before playing games. The CIF expects to update schools this week. High schools do not have the contact tracing resources of college or pro sports, so it would not be surprising if games are immediatel­y canceled when a positive test occurs.

Will spectators be allowed at games?

It will be up to schools to decide policy on who gets to attend games. State recommenda­tions limit observatio­n of youth sports to immediate household members. Leagues should be formulatin­g final plans this week, but expect a conservati­ve approach in the beginning to see how things play out. Look for lots of people volunteeri­ng to be on the chain crew for football games (they get to watch their sons and daughters on the sideline).

Will games be livestream­ed?

Yes. Individual high schools have been preparing to offer livestream­s while campuses remain closed. The NFHS Network has a program that supplied schools with cameras. Fox Sports will be doing six TV and livestream­s a week for football.

What will happen to students playing club soccer?

The CIF is allowing students to participat­e with club and high school teams at the same time under a one-time waiver for all sports except football. Soccer coaches are working with club coaches to make sure players do not over practice. Most club games happen on weekends, so it’s feasible to create balance. But schools must decide whether they want to mix their athletes with others, which goes against some county guidelines.

When will Ventura, Riverside and San Bernardino County athletes get to return?

Counties must reach adjusted COVID-19 cases of 14.0 or less per 100,000 people to clear the way for outdoor sports to begin. Ventura was at 16.9, Riverside 16.6 and San Bernardino 15.2. Every Tuesday, the CDPH announces the newest metrics.

Will there be outside basketball and outdoor volleyball?

Probably. Several schools have created outdoor courts for basketball and volleyball while waiting to see when indoor sports might be approved. La Verne Damien is scheduled to put up an outside basketball court Monday on a tennis court. The San Gabriel Valley Grass League put together by Monrovia coach John Van Deventer for girls’ volleyball begins this week.

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