Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Capel back at practice

Coach had to isolate after testing positive

- Craig meyer

When it came to describing his experience with COVID-19, there was no point in sugarcoati­ng it for Jeff Capel. There were no generaliti­es about enduring challenges and overcoming obstacles that evaded or didn’t accurately reflect the moments of misery he withstood.

“It was a bitch, to be honest with you,” the Pitt men’s basketball coach said Monday. “It was tough.”

Capel is through it now, feeling “a lot better.” Life was coming back to normal, or at least as normal as it could be in such abnormal times. He returned to overseeing practices and was expected to be back on the sideline Tuesday night against Duke, his alma mater, before that game was suddenly postponed because of a positive test within the Pitt program.

The physical and mental strain that the coronaviru­s ravaged upon him, however, aren’t likely to be forgotten, at least not anytime soon.

Though he ultimately didn’t require hospitaliz­ation, Capel, a standout point guard at Duke in the mid-1990s, said he was close to it. He felt many of the symptoms associated with the virus. Then there was the matter of being quarantine­d and isolated from those closest to him, a necessary medical step that came with its own devastatin­g toll.

“I understand a little bit better now of why solitary confinemen­t is a form of punishment,” Capel said. “I understand why Tom Hanks painted a volleyball and turned it into Wilson [in the 2000 film “Cast Away”] and why he lost his mind when Wilson went away.

“It’s difficult.”

Taxing as the past week and a half has been for Capel, he acknowledg­es that he’s fortunate. This is a virus, after all, that has

killed more than 330,000 people in the United State and has sent many more to the hospital, a fate Capel was ultimately able to avoid.

The severity of the coronaviru­s was never lost on Capel.

Before testing positive for COVID-19, which was announced Dec. 19 and caused him to miss Pitt’s 64-54 loss against Louisville on Dec. 22, he had previously expressed skepticism about charging forward with a college basketball season in the middle of a pandemic.

Experienci­ng what exactly COVID-19 can do to an individual — at the relatively young age of 45, no less — didn’t strengthen that belief. He didn’t need to have the coronaviru­s to feel the way he does.

“I just think that when you look around at what’s going on in the country with this virus and this disease and you see the impact it’s having on people, that it’s having on families, that it’s having on our country and you listen to people talking about not traveling or doing these things, it just doesn’t feel right, especially at our level,” Capel said.

That distinctio­n about the level at which he coaches is notable. As part of his Dec. 7 comments on playing during a pandemic, Capel said he doesn’t believe major college athletes can be called amateurs any longer, particular­ly as they continue to play while some smaller conference­s have canceled their basketball seasons and even some of the largest conference­s pushed back their non-revenue sports’ seasons.

That, along with the decentrali­zed power structure that exists in college sports, has made an already uncertain, unstable situation that much murkier.

“The players aren’t getting paid to do this,” Capel said. “It’s different to me when you’re a profession­al athlete. That’s different. That’s your job and you can make a choice whether you want to do it. On the profession­al level, the rules are the same for each team. The leagues determine what the protocols are. Our protocols are all across the board. You’ve got some teams that test every day. You’ve got some teams that test three times a week. You have some conference­s that do something different. I don’t think we should be playing right now.”

It’s also difficult, if not impossible, for Capel to think of his own circumstan­ce without looking at what else has transpired across college basketball over the past several weeks.

One story stands out above all others. Florida forward Keyontae Johnson collapsed during his team’s Dec. 12 game against Florida State and spent the next 10 days in the hospital. Johnson, a projected first-round NBA draft pick, was reportedly diagnosed with acute myocarditi­s, an inflammati­on of the heart that has been linked to COVID-19. The 6-foot-5 junior, a close friend of Pitt wing Au’Diese Toney, was reportedly among a group of Florida players who had tested positive for the virus earlier this year.

It’s a high-profile case that, to Capel, underlines an important point — that the effects of COVID-19 don’t necessaril­y end once someone who previously tested positive returns to their everyday life.

“It’s absolutely amazing to me that’s not a bigger story,” Capel said.

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