Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Positive signs for fall sports

PIAA board votes on issue Friday

- MIKE WHITE

More signs are pointing toward high school sports being on this fall in Pennsylvan­ia.

The PIAA board of directors will vote Friday on whether to have sports, despite the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. But after two meetings Monday and Tuesday, the ball seems to have been moved forward even more in favor of the PIAA’s desire to play.

The PIAA sports medicine advisory committee met Monday night, and while there was discussion on various topics, including possible new requiremen­ts for an athlete’s medical physical, PIAA executive director Bob Lombardi said the committee also decided to stick by a recommenda­tion it made in July.

That recommenda­tion stated “a strict adherence by schools and teams to their school-adopted plans and the governor’s School Sports Guidance should provide a reasonably safe environmen­t for student-athletes to participat­e in interschol­astic athletics as currently scheduled.”

Tuesday, Lombardi had a Zoom meeting with the Pennsylvan­ia athletic oversight committee, which comprises six state legislator­s and oversees the workings of the PIAA. Lombardi made comments that strongly indicate the PIAA wants to have fall sports and that schools around the state can decide whether to participat­e.

“I got the impression from the oversight committee that they were pretty supportive [of having fall sports]. That was my interpreta­tion,” Lombardi said.

“I got the impression from the oversight committee that they were pretty supportive [of having fall sports]. That was my interpreta­tion.”

Bob Lombardi,

PIAA executive director

He also brought up some statistics that were provided to the PIAA by athletic trainers, the PIAA sports medicine committee and UPMC.

“Those numbers I gave you, that out of 30,000 screenings [of athletes], there were only four positive tests? That’s pretty compelling to me,” Lombardi said.

North Allegheny athletic director Bob Bozzuto, president-elect of the Pennsylvan­ia State Athletic Directors Associatio­n, also spoke to the oversight committee and said fall sports should be played. Sean McAleer, director of education for the Pennsylvan­ia Catholic Conference, said the Catholic Conference believes the decisions to allow fall sports should be left up to the PIAA, local leagues and school administra­tors.

But Lee Ann Wentzel, superinten­dent of the Ridley School District near Philadelph­ia, cautioned the oversight committee that extreme thought should be given to many factors when deciding to start fall sports.

She pointed out that a survey of some Pennsylvan­ia superinten­dents showed they were “fairly split” on whether to have all fall sports. But she said more than 75% of the superinten­dents favored moving some contact sports, such as football, to the spring.

The PIAA board voted July 31 to delay the start of practices for two weeks after Gov. Tom Wolf made a recommenda­tion that all sports — school and recreation — be postponed until Jan. 1. The Pennsylvan­ia department­s of health and education backed up Wolf’s claim and said schools should be the ones to make the decision on fall sports.

The PIAA met with staff from the governor’s office Friday, and Lombardi strongly indicated that the PIAA would ultimately decide to have fall sports.

“The only wrong decision is if we don’t give it a try,” Lombardi said.

In a news conference Tuesday, Pennsylvan­ia Health Secretary Rachel Levine was asked if Wolf would ever change his no sports recommenda­tion to a mandate.

“The governor has been very clear about that,” Levine said. “There are no plans to do that.”

The PIAA board of directors meeting is at 3 p.m. Friday.

“I think everybody is wellversed in what the issue is,” Lombardi said. “I think most district people around the state have talked to their schools, and other people have talked to their constituen­cies. Now, we’ll see what the board decides.”

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