San Francisco Chronicle

Storm could affect East Coast football

- By Aaron Beard Aaron Beard is an Associated Press writer.

With Hurricane Florence bearing down on the Carolinas’ coastline, conference­s and schools are monitoring the strengthen­ing storm’s progress and exploring contingenc­ies for games this week.

The National Hurricane Center issued an advisory Monday that the storm is expected to approach the North or South Carolina coast Thursday as an “extremely dangerous major hurricane.” That would be the same day that Wake Forest hosts Boston College in an ACC matchup, and two days before six powerconfe­rence schools host nonconfere­nce games in the Carolinas and Virginia.

For now, the teams are moving forward with game-week plans until told otherwise.

“We’re expecting to play and proceeding and planning like we will until somebody says we won’t,” said N.C. State head coach Dave Doeren, whose Wolfpack host No. 14 West Virginia. “That’s really the best we can do in this situation.”

Florence had strengthen­ed into a Category 4 storm by Monday afternoon with maximum sustained winds near 130 mph, according to the hurricane center. Its projected path appears headed through the center of North Carolina but also could veer through South Carolina and Virginia. And some forecasts have the storm slowing to linger over the Carolinas, spreading heavy rain all the way to West Virginia while leading to flooding and power outages.

It already has forced at least one change: Coastal Carolina’s Saturday home game in Conway, S.C., against Campbell in the Sun Belt Conference has been moved up to Wednesday afternoon and relocated to Campbell’s campus in Buies Creek, N.C.

The ACC’s football operations manual allows for games to be delayed, relocated, suspended, canceled or postponed if conditions “pose a threat to the safety of the game participan­ts and/or fans in attendance.” Meanwhile, North Carolina, N.C. State and Wake Forest all issued statements saying they were monitoring the storm, with N.C. State and UNC noting they were also consulting with regional authoritie­s.

In North Carolina, No. 18 UCF visits UNC in Chapel Hill on Saturday around noon followed a few hours later by the West Virginia-N.C. State matchup about 30 miles east in Raleigh.

“I know they’ve been constantly meeting about the hurricane,” North Carolina head coach Larry Fedora said. “The main concern is for the safety of the fans and the safety of the people who work in the stadium and the safety of the players, so I know the university will do what’s right. I don’t doubt that, and I’ll go along with whatever they decide.”

In South Carolina, No. 2 Clemson hosts Georgia Southern on Saturday afternoon, and South Carolina hosts Marshall that night. And in Virginia, No. 13 Virginia Tech hosts East Carolina — which already had called off classes for the rest of the week as of Tuesday afternoon — and Virginia hosts Ohio in afternoon games.

“First of all, it’s important to get the notion across to the team that they can’t worry or assume anything,” Virginia Tech head coach Justin Fuente said. “We just don’t know what’s going to happen and we have no control over that. We have to worry about the things we can control.”

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