Royal Oak Tribune

How players handled season of COVID-19

How players handled season of COVID-19

- By Ralph D. Russo

The Saturday night after winning an afternoon home game is one of the best times to be a college football player.

Family and loved ones usually await with congratula­tory hugs. Then there is a nice dinner and maybe more celebratin­g with teammates and friends. Few things get a college town hopping like a football victory. But not this season.

“I’d pretty much go home, lay on my couch, watch (video) cut-ups of the game like two or three times. Probably go pick up some food,” Notre Dame offensive tackle Liam Eichenberg said.

To play through a pandemic, players had to sacrifice much of their lives away from the game, along with some of the best aspects of being part of a team.

To reach the playoff, No. 1 Alabama, No. 2 Clemson, No. 3 Ohio State and No. 4 Notre Dame had to go a combined 37-2 on the field and keep the coronaviru­s at bay.

“It’s been incredibly challengin­g,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said. “I just tell them, don’t give up what they want most for what they may want at the moment. It’s just really that simple. And the teams that do this the best and manage this the best, that’s who’s going to finish the best.”

Doing so required lots of COVID-19 testing, and the anxiety that comes with knowing the next test could be the one that puts a season on hold, and little time spent with anyone outside the team.

Even when the players were together, there were obstacles — both literal and figurative — to bonding with teammates.

“Eating together as a team, we do it with a glass divider between us,” Notre Dame receiver Ben Skowronek said Monday during media Zoom sessions for the CFP. “I miss those meals and just getting to know people in the locker room. All that stuff.”

Another oddity brought on by the pandemic: Four days before the New Year’s Day semifinals, the playoff participan­ts were still on their respective campuses.

Alabama faces Notre Dame in the relocated Rose Bowl at the home of the Dallas Cowboys in Arlington, Texas. Clemson and Ohio State meet at the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans in a rematch of last year’s thrilling

semifinal.

Typically, teams arrive at the site of their semifinal about five or six days in advance. The bulk of the preparatio­n for the game has already been done. At the host city, there are media availabili­ties, practices and a walkthroug­h or two at the stadium. There are activities away from the field, outings and meals. Plus, some unsupervis­ed time for the players.

“Going to a bowl site is always what you work for,” Clemson linebacker Baylon Spector said. “It’s very fun. You get to do a lot of different things.”

As for this week, Spector said: “Tonight, we got bingo night. We’re enjoying it as much as we can.”

The teams will arrive at the host cities on Wednesday.

Alabama and Clemson gave players some freedom to be with family on Christmas and other breaks this season, but with strict orders to mask up and keep their distance, even with loved ones.

Notre Dame and Ohio State were more cautious, keeping their players on campus over the recent holiday weekend.

There is still more COVID-19 testing to be done, and each team has learned through experience that nothing is guaranteed this season.

“It was really stressful, but the main thing was trying to keep a level mind and do the things that we needed to do in order to succeed,” Alabama linebacker Dylan Moses said.

Alabama had one game postponed because of an opponent’s COVID-19 outbreak, and it played the Iron Bowl against Auburn without coach Nick Saban after he tested positive.

Notre Dame had a virus outbreak pause its season for about two weeks in late September.

Clemson star Trevor Lawrence missed two games, including the Tigers’ regular- season loss to Notre Dame, after contractin­g COVID-19.

Ohio State played only six games after the Big Ten started in late October, losing two games because of opponents’ COVID-19 issues and one because of their own.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTOS ?? Notre Dame wide receiver Ben Skowronek (11) evades Clemson defensive tackle Tyler Davis (13) during a carry in the second half of the 2020 Atlantic Coast Conference championsh­ip game in Charlotte, N.C.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTOS Notre Dame wide receiver Ben Skowronek (11) evades Clemson defensive tackle Tyler Davis (13) during a carry in the second half of the 2020 Atlantic Coast Conference championsh­ip game in Charlotte, N.C.
 ??  ?? Ohio State offensive lineman Wyatt Davis (52) is shown during the first half of the 2019 Fiesta Bowl game against Clemson in Glendale, Ariz.
Ohio State offensive lineman Wyatt Davis (52) is shown during the first half of the 2019 Fiesta Bowl game against Clemson in Glendale, Ariz.

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