Texarkana Gazette

Georgia’s Smart: Players will be safer working out on campus

- By Paul Newberry

ATLANTA — As he prepares to welcome his players back to campus, Georgia coach Kirby Smart insisted Thursday that they’ll be safer working out under the school’s supervisio­n than on their own.

Smart also called on fans to comply with guidelines for dealing with the coronaviru­s pandemic, warning that a spike in cases could ruin any hopes of playing football in the fall.

“The longer this thing has gone on, the more people begin to relax and say, ‘Well, this won’t affect me,’” Smart said from Athens during a video call with reporters. “The last thing we need right now, if people want to have a football season or any athletic season, is to have another flare-up.”

The Southeaste­rn Conference voted last week to reopen athletic facilities for voluntary workouts beginning June 8, lifting a ban that had been in effect since the sports world shut down in March.

Smart said no one will be forced to return to campus if they don’t feel safe.

“There’s obviously some apprehensi­on and questions, but they have those same questions whether they are in Huntsville or in Macon or in Columbus,” he said. “I know that our facility is one of the safest, and we certainly have the ability to care for that facility better than a lot of places they can go back home.”

Smart pointed to a rigid protocol set up the Georgia’s longtime director of sports medicine, Ron Courson, one of the nation’s most respected athletic trainers. The Bulldogs will work in small groups, giving them plenty of room to spread out in the school’s spacious weight room.

A cleaning crew will go through the facility after each session. The locker rooms will not be used.

“They’ll work out in smaller groups than traditiona­lly before, probably 20 or so guys to a group, and of the 20 that come in, they’ll be subdivided into groups of seven,” Smart said. “So you’re looking at a seven-person rotation in a 1,200-square-foot weight room and they’ll be spaced out.”

Also, Georgia is planning to test and give a full medical screening to every player.

“It’s not going to be the normal,” Smart said. “It’s going to be completely different.”

While the workouts are supposedly on a voluntary basis, many have scoffed at the notion that a player competing for a starting job would not return to campus because of health or safety concerns.

“There is no pressure,” Smart said. “But if you ask these players, every one of them, to a man, is going to tell you they’ve been working out at home. I would argue that the home environmen­t — whether that’s a local gym or the local high school or their backyard, anywhere they’re working out — is not more safe than one that is profession­ally cleaned and monitored and taken care of by our staff.

“As a parent, I would certainly feel much better about my son or daughter going to work in that environmen­t than where they’re working out currently.”

If a player does test positive, he will have the choice of returning home or being quarantine­d on campus. Contact tracing will allow the school to determine if anyone else has been infected, Smart said.

“We are not looking really far out of what is going to happen in the season,” the coach added. “We are looking at June and the immediate issues there.”

Smart declined to say whether he thinks the season actually will be played, or how it might look. NASCAR has resumed racing without fans in the stands, a model that nearly every other sport seems resigned to follow.

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