The Mercury News Weekend

Big Ten scraps nonconfere­nce football games

- By John Zenor

The Big Ten Conference announced Thursday it will not play nonconfere­nce games in football and several other sports this fall, the most dramatic move yet by a power conference because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The league cited medical advice in making its decision and added ominously that the plan would be applied only “if the conference is able to participat­e in fall sports.”

“As we continue to focus on how to play this season in a safe and responsibl­e way, based on the best advice of medical experts, we are also prepared not to play in order to ensure the health, safety and wellness of our student-athletes should the circumstan­ces so dictate,” the league said.

Besides football, the sports affected include men’s and women’s cross country, field hockey, men’s and women’s soccer, and women’s volleyball.

“By limiting competitio­n to other Big Ten institutio­ns, the conference will have the greatest flexibilit­y to adjust its own operations throughout the season and make quick decisions in realtime based on the most current evolving medical advice and the fluid nature of the pandemic,” the Big Ten said.

The announceme­nt came a day after the Ivy League called off fall sports and Stanford announced it was cutting 11 varsity sports as it struggles with the financial impact the virus outbreak is having on its budget.

There was no immediate reaction from the other big conference­s, though the SEC, ACC, Big 12 and Pac-12 have all indicated they intend to play fall sports, anchored by football, by far the biggest moneymaker.

The Athletic reported that the Pac-12 Conference also would announce a league-only schedule in “the coming days.”

Stadium’s Brett McMurphy reported that the Atlantic Coast Conference is expected to follow suit and play conference-only games.

Missouri athletic director Jim Sterk was asked about the possible rationale for a conference-only schedule.

“Probably, it’s a comfort level of how protocols are being enacted, how testing is done and then keeping it within that family, if you will — your expanded social circle or social pod,” said Sterk, whose Tigers play in the SEC. “You might be able to control things more that way, or feel like you can, anyway versus the unknown of people coming from outside our 11 states.”

The marquee nonconfere­nce matchups in the Big Ten this season included Notre Dame vs. Wisconsin on Oct. 3 at Lambeau Field, home of the NFL’s Green Bay Packers. A handful of teams were scheduled to play two Big Ten opponents, including Bowling Green, Central Michigan and Northern Illinois.

The Big Ten said it would release detailed schedules later and continue to evaluate other sports. The league said its schools will honor scholarshi­ps for athletes who choose not to compete in the upcoming academic year because of concerns about the coronaviru­s.

Indiana athletic director Scott Dolson said he and his Big Ten colleagues “know that there remain many questions that still need to be answered, and we will work toward finding those answers in the coming weeks.”

SAN JOSE STATE-PENN STATE CANCELED >> The Big Ten’s announceme­nt forced the San Jose State football game at Penn State scheduled for Sept. 19 to be canceled.

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