The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Summer slips away as PIAA stays silent

- Danarkans on Twitter@21stcentur­ymedia.com@ darkansBy Dan Arkans Matt Smith Columnist

What will happen in August to high school sports around here? Nobody has the answer. Not coaches, not administra­tors, not parents, not the PIAA.

Aug. 10 marks the first day on PIAA’s fall sports schedule. Real, organized practicing is permitted. Technicall­y, it’s called heat acclimatiz­ation week. Physical contact is forbidden. The following week is when the fun starts.

By now, every school district in the state wishing to have an athletics department has implemente­d a school-board -approved health and safety plan for the coronaviru­s age. Voluntary workouts at high schools throughout the state got under way in late June.

The big test will come when football players are are in full pads and helmets, currently scheduled for Aug. 17. That’s when teams get serious and game plans for the opening weekend of the regular season are set.

The most important question is how can football players stay safe in this period of so much uncertaint­y?

According to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, the PIAA is keeping a close eye on the decisions colleges have made. For instance, the Centennial Conference and Ivy League have already canned their fall sports seasons, leaving the PIAA to seek direction from the Department of Health, the Department of Education and Gov. Tom Wolf himself.

Until then, high school athletes across the state remain in the dark.

“We really need more guidance and more informatio­n from those agencies before any finalizati­on could come from us because things change weekly,” Robert Lombardi, the PIAA’s executive director, told the Post-Gazette last week.

That’s not an encouragin­g sign.

Most folks are well-ed

ucated on the dangers of this seemingly never-ending virus. No, it didn’t magically disappear in April. No, 99 percent of cases are not harmless.

Making this an even more unsatisfac­tory situation for the PIAA is that new confirmed cases of COVID-19 were announced late last week ... and the numbers are not promising. Pennsylvan­ia reported more than 1,000 new coronaviru­s infections for the first time since May 10. A wide portion of the blame for the rising numbers, state officials said, was crowded bars where people aren’t wearing masks.

It’s the middle of July and cases have spiked, at least momentaril­y. That bit of news doesn’t bode well for high school sports.

There are ancillary concerns to consider, too. The sidelines, as we know them, could look a lot different. Anywhere from 50 to 100 players, staff, trainers and officials roam the out of bounds area during the course of a 2½to three-hour game. And what of transporta­tion? School budgets could be stretched transporti­ng players, coaches and equipment. Perhaps gone are the days that teams get by using one or two buses to get from Point A to Point B.

Don’t be surprised if fall sports happen ... except for football. A case could be made that volleyball — played indoors — goes by the wayside along with football. However, cross country, tennis, field hockey and soccer shouldn’t have much of a problem following CDC guidelines.

The smart play, for the PIAA, would be to push everything back. No need to wait around and see what happens in the next couple weeks. Take direction from nearby states. The New Jersey State Interschol­astic Associatio­n has delayed the start of fall practices and eliminated the Week Zero game from its football schedule. Jersey football teams will play their first regular season games Oct. 2.

The PIAA should take it one step further. If regular seasons were to begin in the second week of September, would that be so terrible? An eight-week football schedule is feasible. District playoffs can run through Thanksgivi­ng weekend. If you have to, the PIAA can do away with state tournament­s. Does anyone expect to be in Hershey this fall, anyway?

It’s an idea.

But for now, we are in the dark, wondering what happens next.

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 ?? MEDIANEWS GROUP PHOTO ?? The Pennridge boys soccer team opened voluntary workouts at the end of June.
MEDIANEWS GROUP PHOTO The Pennridge boys soccer team opened voluntary workouts at the end of June.
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