Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NCAA addresses plan with warnings

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The NCAA handed down its latest guidelines for playing through a pandemic while also sounding an alarm: The prospect of having a fall semester with football and other sports is looking grim.

If the games can go on, the NCAA says college athletes should be tested for covid-19 no more than 72 hours before they play, players with highrisk exposures to the coronaviru­s should be quarantine­d for 14 days and everybody on the sideline should wear a mask.

The nation’s largest governing body for college sports released an updated guidance Thursday to help member schools navigate competitio­n, but it comes as the pandemic rages on. Around the country, the number of covid-19 cases are on the rise and many states have slowed reopenings or reinstated social-distancing restrictio­ns on some businesses.

“This document lays out the advice of health care profession­als as to how to resume college sports if we can achieve an environmen­t where covid-19 rates are manageable,” NCAA President Mark Emmert said in a statement.

“Today, sadly, the data point in the wrong direction. If there is to be college sports in the fall, we need to get a much better handle on the pandemic.”

The recommenda­tions were developed by the NCAA Covid-19 Advisory Panel, Autonomy-5 Medical Advisory Group, representi­ng the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and SEC, and other medical groups.

The Autonomy-5 or Power 5 conference­s also intend to provide their own similar guidance to schools. A copy of that document, which has not been finalized, was obtained by The Associated Press and first reported on by Sports Illustrate­d. Even before the NCAA’s announceme­nt, the American Athletic Conference said it planned to require its schools to meet or exceed NCAA guidance.

Among the highlights of the NCAA’s recommenda­tions:

▪ Test results should be obtained within 72 hours of competitio­n for athletes competing in so-called high-contact risk sports, such as football, basketball, hockey and lacrosse.

▪ Face shields should be integrated into sports where feasible.

▪ Masks should be worn by everyone on a sideline, including when an athlete moves from the playing field to interact with a coach.

▪ CDC guidelines should be used for determinin­g when individual­s can resume activities after testing positive for covid-19. Time-based strategy means isolation until 72 hours after recovery and at least 10 days after symptoms first appeared.

▪ All individual­s with highrisk exposure must be quarantine­d for 14 days.

The final point could be crucial for managing a team this season. Simply being deemed a close contact of someone who tests positive could sideline players for two weeks.

At this point, though, the hopes of being able to conduct a college football season in the fall are dimming. Plans are already being made to modify it.

The Big Ten and Pac-12 announced last week that they would play only conference games in football and other sports to help minimize potential disruption­s caused by covid-19.

The Big East joined those leagues Thursday by going conference-only for the fall season, which for the basketball-focused league includes men’s and women’s soccer, men’s and women’s cross country, volleyball and field hockey.

Other FBS conference­s have not decided yet on scheduling formats for the coming football season, instead waiting until late July. The regular season is scheduled to begin around Labor Day weekend, with dozens of game slated for Sept. 3-7.

“Right now we’d like to buy as much time as possible,” AAC Commission­er Mike Aresco told Sports Talk 790 in Houston.

At most major college football schools, athletes started coming back to campus in June to participat­e in voluntary workouts in team facilities. This week football teams were allowed to begin mandatory team activities, including unpadded walkthroug­h practices.

Through the last month and half schools have been testing athletes regularly, and already some flare ups of the virus have caused activities to be shut down at schools such as Ohio State, Kansas State, Houston and North Carolina.

At many schools, positive tests among athletes have been minimal. On Thursday, Oklahoma reported it had zero positive tests among 98 football players tested the day before.

The problem is colleges and their athletic department­s are not operating in a true bubble the way the NBA is doing with its teams in Florida. If states and communitie­s are struggling to contain the virus, it makes it more difficult to keep athletes safe — especially when the full student body arrives on campus.

It also becomes more problemati­c for athletic department­s to potentiall­y contribute to the spread of infection by gathering large groups of people to engage in contact sports, and then sending them back out on campus and into the surroundin­g communitie­s.

“So nothing that occurs to the student athlete is in a silo,” said Dr. Chris Kratochvil, executive director of the Global Center for Health Security at University of Nebraska Medical Center. “And certainly we want to protect them, but we want to protect the broader community as well.”

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