Santa Fe New Mexican

No college football this year?

Universiti­es weigh scrapping season in threat to a cash cow

- By Janet Lorin and Brandon Kochkodin

It’s the toughest call in sports this year: to play or not to play. Colleges across the U.S. are assessing the spread of COVID-19 to determine whether students should return to campus in the fall, and many schools must also decide whether it’s safe to resume football, a cash cow for some big schools and for the surroundin­g college towns.

That determinat­ion will have a financial impact on athletic department­s for years to come, said Willis Jones, an associate professor of higher education at the University of Kentucky.

“Schools will put off that decision until they have absolutely no other choice,” said Jones, who researches intercolle­giate athletics. “Once there is one that’s brave enough and says ‘We can’t do this and still protect our student athletes,’ I think other schools will follow.”

That’s what happened in March after the Ivy League canceled its basketball championsh­ips to limit the spread of the novel coronaviru­s. A few schools have recently scotched fall sports, including the Maine liberal arts college Bowdoin on Monday and the 13-member California Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n in May. Their decisions could embolden cancellati­ons at larger schools, and at small schools where football is a big part of campus culture and is key to enrollment.

Schools that bring in the largest revenue from football that responded to Bloomberg’s questions, including the University of Notre Dame and the University of Georgia, are still making decisions and planning for a season. At Notre Dame, where football revenue accounts for less than 7 percent of its $1.7 billion operating budget, “health and safety considerat­ions trump stadium revenue,” said Paul

Browne, a spokesman for the school in South Bend, Ind. Georgia’s call will be made with the advice of medical officials and guidance from the conference’s leaders, the National Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n, the governor and school officials.

At the profession­al level, the National Football League has canceled off-season training programs and, with the exception of injured players undergoing rehab, kept its facilities shuttered. The league plans to start its training camps this summer, albeit under strict testing protocols.

Not all players have heeded the league’s guidance. The Tampa Bay Times reported this week that Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady recently gathered about a dozen of his teammates for a nonsanctio­ned workout at a local high school despite multiple members of the organizati­on having tested positive for the virus.

For universiti­es deciding how to proceed, there is at least some precedent this time, unlike three months ago when administra­tors faced a similar challenge as the virus spread in the U.S. The Ivy League — not exactly an athletics powerhouse — was the early mover, and hundreds of schools quickly followed by canceling spring sports to limit contagion. Some basketball tournament­s were under way, with games being played in the Big Ten and Atlantic Coast and Big East conference­s, according to an analysis by Christophe­r Marsicano, a visiting assistant professor of educationa­l studies at Davidson College.

The Ivy League, whose eight schools include Harvard, Yale and Princeton, scrapped its conference championsh­ips on March 10. The games were to be hosted at Harvard in Massachuse­tts, an early hotspot for the coronaviru­s in the U.S.

“In the four days that the league discussed what to do with spring sports, diagnosed cases in Massachuse­tts went from 13 to 28 to 42 to 91, clearly an exponentia­l growth curve, albeit starting from a small base,” Harvard’s president, Lawrence Bacow, said by email in late April. “I had my experts telling me it was not safe to bring large groups of people from around the country together under the circumstan­ces.”

On March 11, the Ivy League also canceled spring sports. By the following day, 190 more Division I athletic programs that had pending championsh­ip games had canceled their own tournament­s, including one in the Big East held at Madison Square Garden that was halted midway, Marsicano said. The NCAA also canceled its March Madness basketball tournament on March 12.

The decisions illustrate how colleges respond to crisis.

“Once the Ivy League canceled its tournament, both Duke and Kansas, with big massive programs, decided not to play basketball on March 12, leading the dominoes to fall,” said Marsicano, who directs the College Crisis Initiative, which has examined data about college response to COVID-19.

The Ivies could afford to act first. For the wealthiest universiti­es, canceling spring sports did not feel like a make-or-break budget decision as it seemed to be for many Division I schools.

“The revenue, when it comes, is nice, but it’s not the rationale, the driving force behind the decision,” said Robin Harris, the Ivy League executive director since 2009. “It was about the right thing to do.”

The league formally began contingenc­y planning on March 6 with its first call on March 8, according to Harris. The eight presidents spoke by phone four times over the course of the decision-making process. The schools each had proxies meeting separately; Harvard’s was provost Alan Garber, a physician and an economist who has written about managing epidemics.

They didn’t immediatel­y shut down sports. The aim as of March 9, a Monday, was to hold the tournament, but with limited fans, on its scheduled dates, beginning March 13.

“If we acted prematurel­y, we would inconvenie­nce a lot of people, disrupt the lives of our students, faculty and staff needlessly and their parents. We would also squander a lot of resources,” Bacow said. “However, if we did not act and we were wrong about the public health crisis we were facing, people could die.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Notre Dame wide receiver Chase Claypool celebrates a touchdown against Duke during a Nov. 9 game in Durham, N.C. Colleges like Notre Dame are still trying to decide whether it’s worth the risk of playing during the pandemic or losingout on potentiall­y huge amounts of revenue.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Notre Dame wide receiver Chase Claypool celebrates a touchdown against Duke during a Nov. 9 game in Durham, N.C. Colleges like Notre Dame are still trying to decide whether it’s worth the risk of playing during the pandemic or losingout on potentiall­y huge amounts of revenue.

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