The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Pa. halts school sports until 2021

Three-week shutdown among restrictio­ns announced by Gov. Wolf

- By Austin Hertzog ahertzog@21st-centurymed­ia.com @AustinHert­zog on Twitter

High school and recreation­al sports are being put on hold for the remainder of 2020 after Gov. Tom Wolf announced statewide restrictio­ns to combat the spread of coronaviru­s on Thursday.

High school sports in the state will be shut down for the next three weeks, starting at midnight on Saturday, according to a release sent out by the governor’s office during his Thursday press conference. All practices and competitio­ns will be halted until the restrictio­ns expire at 8 a.m. on Jan. 4.

The state has seen a surge of COVID-19 cases since the start of November with record-highs reported in new daily cases and hospitaliz­ations, and deaths have reached triple-digit totals per day.

“We know that COVID-19 thrives in places where people gather together,” Wolf said in the release. “Therefore, these mitigation measures target high-risk environmen­ts and activities and aim to reduce the spread of this devastatin­g virus.”

The release noted an increase in cases among school-age children and that the surge “increases the risk that asymptomat­ic participan­ts will spread the virus at a game or practice, in the locker room, while traveling to and from events, or at team meals, parties or other gatherings.”

Profession­al and college sports were not included in the state’s measures. Closures of gyms, theaters and casinos, and a ban on indoor dining at restaurant­s were also included in the state’s restrictio­ns.

High school sports competitio­n was slated to begin Friday in most parts of the state after the PIAA chose to stay the course at its Board of Directors meeting on Wednesday despite requests by the Pennsylvan­ia Principals Assocation and Pennsylvan­ia Associated of School Adminstrat­ors to delay the start of the season.

The PIAA instead voted to allow teams to compete and schedule games through the end of the state postseason in the event of not qualifying for playoffs or being previously eliminated.

A measure adopted in fall as well, it allows team the maximum amount of time to schedule games. The decision becomes all the more important after Thursday’s decision to shut down for three weeks.

Pioneer Athletic Conference schools were scheduled to hold their preseasons through the remainder of December and begin league-only competitio­n on Jan. 4. With preseasons unable to commence the remainder of December, that timeline must adjust.

The PIAA on Wednesday also changed the PIAA basketball playoffs to district champions only and modified the state wrestling tournament to just eight qualifiers in each weight reaching Hershey.

Pennsylvan­ia high school sports already adopted health and safety guidelines including social distancing, disinfecti­ng equipment and spectator policies. Locally and in most other leagues, student-athletes will be required to wear masks during competitio­n (excluding swimming).

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