The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Too soon to say if prep sports can return in June

- By Todd Holcomb

GHSF Daily

Robin Hines of the Georgia High School Associatio­n remains hopeful for an early-June return of sports activities, which would include conditioni­ng for football and tryouts for softball, volleyball and cheerleadi­ng.

But the GHSA’s executive director said in an interview Wednesday it’s still too soon to make that call. The course of COVID19 infections and deaths is one among many data that will factor into that decision, Hines said.

“What happens tomorrow if there’s a huge spike in COVID cases? We’re certainly not going to open up,” Hines said. “We can’t make a decision (to resume sports) based on informatio­n we don’t have yet. We’re trying to be ready for every scenario. We want to start as quickly as we can if it’s safe and within what the governor is saying.

“We’re gathering informatio­n from many sources, from the national (high school) federation to our sports-medicine advisory committee. If we feel it’s safe enough to have a measured return to sports activities, that’s what we’ll do.”

Hines stressed the word “measured” when describing the sports’ return. Even with a June start, it would not be business as usual in the weight rooms or practice fields, he said. “We’re not going to one day say, ‘June 1, all right, coaches, have at it,’ and let them bring in 100 kids in one large group,” Hines said. “We want to provide guidelines. It’s going to be more restrictiv­e, like X-amount of kids for 45 minutes, 10-15 minutes between the next group so they can wipe down equipment and disinfect; dress at home, shower at home, make sure social distancing can be practiced.”

The GHSA normally leaves summer activities, which are voluntary, largely to the schools and coaching staffs, but Hines noted these are unique times. The GHSA effectivel­y ended spring sports March 12, although hope lingered for a resumption until April 2, when the GHSA officially canceled them. That came as Gov. Brian Kemp closed public schools for the remainder of the school year. Hines said Kemp’s guidance and timetable would remain prominent in any GHSA decision.

“Once we get through the governor’s mandate for closing schools, we’ll take a look at all the informatio­n available to us and move forward,” Hines said. “Hopefully and prayerfull­y, that will be the first of June. But I don’t have a crystal ball. I have an idea, but I want to validate that through medical profession­als and make sure we’re on the same page.”

Hines added: “We’re not going to be less restrictiv­e than what the governor’s guidelines are because we trust what he says and want to follow what he says. He’s got a lot of experts he’s consulted, and he’s done a great job.”

Hines acknowledg­ed that some school systems might be more restrictiv­e than the governor, keeping their schools closed or students out of classrooms longer than others, potentiall­y putting their sports teams and athletes at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge. Hines indicated the GHSA would not delay summer workouts to level that playing field. The first date that football teams can practice — July 27 — could be trickier, as that is determined by GHSA bylaws. “I think the membership as a whole and the trustees will prefer applying the same rules to everyone,” said Hines, but he added: “Summer workouts are voluntary and always have been. Student-athletes and their families would decide if they want to participat­e, and schools also can make that decision.”

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Owners have all but conceded that games at Arizona’s Chase Field or elsewhere would be played this year without fans, and they’d like their players to share some monetary hurt.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN / ASSOCIATED PRESS Owners have all but conceded that games at Arizona’s Chase Field or elsewhere would be played this year without fans, and they’d like their players to share some monetary hurt.

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