Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Decision on the fall is delayed

No ruling yet on staging championsh­ip events

-

Heeding pleas for patience from college sports leaders, the NCAA Board of Governors held off on making any decisions about whether to hold championsh­ip events in fall sports during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Today the Board of Governors and I agreed that we must continue to thoughtful­ly and aggressive­ly monitor health conditions around the country and the implementa­tion of the COVID-19 guidelines we issued last week,” NCAA president Mark Emmert said Friday.

More than two dozen Division I conference­s urged the NCAA’s highest governing body to delay a decision on fall championsh­ips until a majority of leagues determine whether to hold regular-season competitio­n.

A letter from College Commission­ers Associatio­n President and Ohio Valley Conference commission­er Beth DeBauche, dated July 22, was sent to the board ahead of its Friday meeting. A copy of the letter was obtained by The Associated Press.

The CCA is comprised of commission­ers from all 32 Division I conference­s. The letter was supported by 27 conference­s, including each Power Five conference and several that do not sponsor football. Five conference­s abstained. The NCAA’s Division I football oversight committee made a similar plea for patience to the board in its own letter sent earlier this week.

In its letter, the CCA said it was “concerned to learn the board is contemplat­ing taking action soon to cancel all fall season NCAA championsh­ips” because of concerns related to COVID-19.

“We discussed other complexiti­es in addition to the health and safety impacts, to include team availabili­ty, travel limitation­s and various local and state restrictio­ns,” Emmert said.

The board’s next meeting is Aug. 4. The CCA’s letter recommende­d delaying any decision on fall championsh­ips to allow more conference­s to make their own decisions regarding regular-season play. The NCAA controls national championsh­ip events such as tournament­s, playoffs and meets, but has no authority over what would be considered the regular season in any sport.

In major college football, the NCAA has no say: The conference­s control the College Football Playoff and the bowls. The NCAA sponsors playoffs in the second-tier of Division I football (Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n) and Divisions II and III.

Still, calling off fall championsh­ips would send a message the NCAA doesn’t believe the events can be conducted with the best interest of athletes in mind and could call into question why conference­s are moving move forward with plans to play football or other sports in the first semester.

“To make championsh­ips decisions before conference­s determine their regularsea­son plans would result in preempting the conference­s’ decision-making process,” the letter said. “Accordingl­y, the CCA would recommend that when the majority of the sport sponsoring conference­s drop or postpone their fall competitio­ns, then it would be appropriat­e for the NCAA to begin a process to evaluate their own championsh­ips schedules.”

Among the conference­s that have already decided to postpone fall sports, with the hope of making them up in the second semester: Ivy League, Patriot League, Southweste­rn Athletic Conference, Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference and Colonial Athletic Conference.

The 10 Football Bowl Subdivisio­n conference­s that make up Division I football’s top tier are in the process of adjusting schedules and hoping to play a regular season that has billions of dollars in media rights deals attached to it.

The Big Ten and Pac-12 already have announced that they intend to play only conference games to better manage potential COVID-19 disruption­s. The ACC is considerin­g a re-worked schedule that would include Notre Dame playing football as a member of a conference for the first time in program history.

Late Friday, Michigan State became the first school to publicly announce its entire football team has been placed in 14-day quarantine due to positive COVID-19 tests for some players and staff members.

 ?? Associated Press ?? The NCAA has delayed a ruling on fall sports, which includes James Franklin’s Nittany Lions.
Associated Press The NCAA has delayed a ruling on fall sports, which includes James Franklin’s Nittany Lions.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States