Rome News-Tribune

Winter sports spark new worries for COVID-19 spread in Georgia

- By Beau Evans

Georgia public schools are grappling with how to host indoor winter sports safely as the COVID-19 pandemic flares up across the state and throughout the U.S.

Fresh off worrying about football season, school districts are prepping to play close-contact sports like basketball and wrestling in gymnasiums, which health experts say pose far greater risk for spreading the virus than outdoor stadiums.

Left largely to decide their own rules, the state’s roughly 180 school districts are taking cues from the Georgia High School Associatio­n (GHSA) to give guidance on mask-wearing, keeping safe distances between players and limiting spectators to a small fraction of the fans who normally attend games.

Robin Hines, the GHSA’s executive director, said hundreds of high-school football teams have nearly completed their seasons with only a few games being canceled each week, in part due to COVID- 19 measures like limited locker-room interactio­n for players and fewer fans in the stands.

That success, as well as few disruption­s for the indoor volleyball season during the fall, give Hines confidence Georgia’s nearly 3,000 schools will be able to safely hold athletic competitio­ns no matter what punches COVID-19 may throw.

But sports like basketball and wrestling still feel troubling, Hines acknowledg­ed, because closed gyms have diminished air circulatio­n that could create hospitable grounds for coronaviru­s.

“We feel good about where things have gone so far, but as it gets colder and we move indoors, that’s certainly cause for concern and we’ll take a close look at things,” Hines said. “Everyone’s going to have to measure the riskreward factor as they go.”

For basketball season, which starts this week, the jump ball has been nixed so that visiting teams take first possession to start the game and a coin toss decides overtime possession. Players on the bench must sit six feet apart, and referees’ whistles will either be electronic or have cloth coverings to block spit from spraying onto the court.

Wrestling matches will see fewer teams competing in the same gym, with dual tournament­s to take place in several gyms instead of the usual one site. Sectional tournament­s will be eliminated entirely.

Mats should also be sanitized frequently. Bibb County schools, for instance, will have access to a machine that sprays a sanitizing mist on wrestling mats, which takes about 10 minutes to settle and zap away germs, said the district’s athletics director, Barney Hester.

“Anything we can do to help prevent any kind of spread, we’re probably going overboard to do it,” Hester said.

Despite the optimism, public-health experts are wary of the risks indoor sports could pose for Georgia, particular­ly as COVID-19 cases begin climbing again.

Positive cases have crept back up in recent weeks from a daily average of just under 1,200 cases on Oct. 1 to an average of nearly 2,400 daily cases as of Thursday. Hospitaliz­ations from the virus have also increased this month.

As of Thursday, nearly 400,000 people had tested positive for COVID- 19 in Georgia. The virus had killed 8,569 Georgians.

Gyms hosting close-contact indoor sports represent “the riskiest place for spreading the virus to others,” said Dr. Mark Ebell, an epidemiolo­gy and biostatist­ics professor at the University of Georgia’s College of Public Health.

The risks are even greater since high-school sports involve younger people who may not show any symptoms of COVID- 19, increasing chances they could unintentio­nally carry the virus home to more vulnerable family members like parents and grandparen­ts, Ebell said.

“I think it would be irresponsi­ble to proceed with these sports, especially with spectators who would often be in higher risk groups,” Ebell said.

At least one school district, DeKalb County, has decided to postpone winter sports indefinite­ly for the 2020-21 school year, though athletes are still allowed to train, according to a district spokeswoma­n.

And while wrestling is still on for Savannah-Chatham County schools, district officials only recently reversed an earlier decision to cancel the season over health concerns, a district spokeswoma­n said.

Elsewhere, many of the state’s largest school districts are crafting plans to reduce the virus’ spread as much as possible this winter, hoping to let student athletes hit the court and the mats with minimal disruption and health issues.

In particular, many large districts plan to ticket fans electronic­ally so they maintain a strict cap on attendance and drasticall­y reduce how many people will be allowed in school gyms.

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