New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

In Texas, football’s pull is stronger than pandemic fears

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When the floodlight­s snapped on for the season opener at the new $25 million stadium in Celina, Texas, 66-year-old Kim Merchant was in the stands, pandemic be damned.

The infection risk was worth it to see his grandson representi­ng Celina on the field on a recent Friday night, and his granddaugh­ter leading cheers on the sidelines.

“You’ve got to find a way to move forward,” said Merchant, who was among a few thousand spectators streaming into the stadium rising out of North Texas cow pastures in the hinterland­s of Dallas. Few in this town question why playing football is more important to them than locking down to keep COVID-19 at bay, just as few question why a town of about 18,000 people would need a stadium big enough to seat a third of its population. “Football in Texas is huge,” Merchant said.

While many profession­al teams play cloistered without spectators, and college conference­s like the Big 10 and Pac-12 go on hiatus, Texas high schools are getting on with the football season, fans and all. If Texas pulls it off, it may rally other states, and perhaps even encourage more college and profession­al teams to allow spectators.

Football is a rite of fall in the Lone Star State. The game at the high school level is often the focal point of community pride, with mascots emblazoned on water towers and stadiums that act more as cathedrals where people gather once a week in rare cohesion. While the state contains two of the nation’s six most populous cities, many of its residents take the most pride in the small-town high school version of the game, played on sunbaked fields from Van Horn to Deweyville.

A successful season would be a milestone in the opening of Texas’s economy that began in May — and caused a spike in hospitaliz­ations and deaths that’s only now begun to subside. But new outbreaks could shut down the season and strike a blow against further opening. In Itasca, a town with fewer than 2,000 residents, the high school already has canceled at least two games after an athletics department employee tested positive for COVID-19.

Texas struggled to control the pandemic. Hospitaliz­ations related to the coronaviru­s peaked at nearly 10,900 in late July and have since fallen to fewer than 4,000, according to state data.

After intense debate, the University Interschol­astic League, the governing body for athletics and other extracurri­cular activities, allowed smaller high schools to begin their season Aug. 27. Larger schools, some of them in urban virus hotspots like Houston, Dallas and Austin, can start Sept. 24 with attendance limited to half of capacity in stadiums that seat as many as 19,000.

Across the nation, 16 states have postponed the season until spring, including California, Colorado and Virginia, said Zack Poff, who heads national football coverage for MaxPreps, a high school sports network owned by ViacomCBS Inc. The rest are playing football or planning to.

Texas is the big test: The state is strewn with stadiums that cost tens of millions of dollars and have seating capacity that rivals those of small universiti­es. School districts in Katy and McKinney recently built $70 million stadiums in a competitio­n supercharg­ed in 2012 when the Dallas suburb of Allen spent $60 million on a facility that seats 18,000.

Schools compete in divisions according to size, and average attendance last year at the 12 championsh­ip games was 18,140. The marquee contest for the biggest schools attracted 47,818 fans. In Florida, another football powerhouse, the eight championsh­ips drew an average of only 4,196.

Jon Kay, who coached Houston-area North Shore Senior High School to titles for the past two years, knows the season is fragile. “I don’t think that our governing bodies, be it the UIL, or our school district or the state, would blink an eye at shutting down all extracurri­cular activities if they saw a significan­t spike” in disease, Kay said.

Superinten­dent Keith Murphy of Melissa ISD in the Dallas exurbs had to weigh the risk of football against that of excluding students from extracurri­cular activities that motivate them. “It wasn’t an easy decision to make, but it was a decision that we made through the consensus of our community,” said Murphy.

In Celina, Bobcat Stadium towers above ranch land and the main entrance proclaims its eight championsh­ips. People wearing the orange-and-white home colors queued to get in, spread out a little more than usual across the parking lot and onto a grassy field.

Even with attendance at half capacity, some fans broke spacing guidelines to angle for better views, and face coverings drooped around necks in heat that lingered above 90 degrees long after sunset. Amid the ebullience of a season opener, fear of a deadly virus dissipated with every pass, punt, tackle and touchdown.

Though being outdoors mitigates risk, 50% capacity probably isn’t enough to keep people safe, especially when they’re cheering an intercepti­on or shouting at a bad call, said Catherine Troisi, an infectious-disease epidemiolo­gist at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.

“The safest way is to have six feet around each person or around family pods,” she said. “You can’t do that with 50% capacity. Could you do it with 25%? Maybe.”

For many parents and players, the risks pale compared with what they’d miss if the season were canceled. Senior Army Ellison couldn’t follow in his stepfather’s footsteps by playing for Celina in a championsh­ip. In South Texas, Jaime Gonzalez won’t be able to put together a highlights reel. And in Melissa, football has been the center of senior Braylon Brown’s life and also, perhaps, the ticket to college.

“He’s found a football family,” said Ron Brown, Braylon’s father.

 ?? Godofredo A. Vasquez / Houston Chronicle ?? North Shore quarterbac­k Dematrius Davis (9) scrambles out of the pocket against Duncanvill­e during the state 6A Division 1 championsh­ip Dec. 21 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. North Shore won 31-17. Davis will play college ball at Auburn.
Godofredo A. Vasquez / Houston Chronicle North Shore quarterbac­k Dematrius Davis (9) scrambles out of the pocket against Duncanvill­e during the state 6A Division 1 championsh­ip Dec. 21 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. North Shore won 31-17. Davis will play college ball at Auburn.

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