The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Big Ten is grappling with uncertaint­y for fall season

- By Mitch Stacy and Eric Olson

Less than four months before the scheduled kickoff of the college football season, not one of the 14 schools in the Big Ten Conference can say for sure it will have students back on campus this fall — a crucial step for sports.

Uncertaint­y about how the coronaviru­s pandemic will unfold through the summer has kept universiti­es from making a definitive decision about the fall semester, which typically begins in late August. The football season, for now, is due to begin Aug. 29, though Big Ten schools don’t begin play until the following week.

Commission­ers of the nation’s major college football conference­s told Vice President Mike Pence last month that college sports cannot return from the coronaviru­s shutdown until campuses have reopened. Those decisions will lie with individual college presidents working with state and local health officials,

Big Ten Commission­er Kevin Warren told the Chicago Tribune the conference is at least six weeks away from making any determinat­ions about the fall sports season. Organized team activities are on hold until at least June 1 and the situation will be re-evaluated then. Warren’s office didn’t respond to a message seeking further comment.

Big Ten schools, like others, have begun planning for reopening campuses, possibly with social distancing guidelines, masks and other precaution­s left in place. But none can say definitive­ly that it will happen on time this fall.

The most resolute about having students back has been Purdue President Mitch Daniels. The former

Republican governor of Indiana said students will be back on campus “in typical numbers” this fall, adding that Purdue will remain “sober about the certain problems that the COVID-19 virus represents, but determined not to surrender helplessly to those difficulti­es but to tackle and manage them aggressive­ly and creatively.”

Daniels suggested that could involve reducing the size of classes, more online instructio­n and keeping older, more vulnerable people away from the student population.

Iowa higher education officials say they are planning to have the state’s three campuses open in the fall, but there are no solid plans yet. There was a similar announceme­nt at Nebraska.

Officials at Ohio State, Penn State, Illinois and Wisconsin said they expect to make announceme­nts in June or July.

Indiana President Michael A. McRobbie wrote in a email to the university community last week that it “would not be realistic or even responsibl­e to promise a full resumption of inperson activity in the fall” while the potential still exists for a recurrence of the virus.

Or as David Weismantel, who co-chairs the campus reopening task force at Michigan State, put it: “We are on the virus’ timeline.”

Maryland, Rutgers, Michigan, Minnesota and Northweste­rn are in various stages of planning.

The NCAA’s top doctor said he is cautiously optimistic that there will be college sports in the fall as long as leaders take a methodical approach. Dr. Brian Hainline told The AP last week that it would have to involve widespread testing for coronaviru­s.

Regarding football and other fall sports, one early proposal included playing games in stadiums without fans to at least secure the TV revenue, but the idea has been met with some derision.

“Think about that, if students aren’t on campus that means the institutio­n has made a decision it’s not safe for those students to be here on campus,” Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith said. “Why would it be safe for student-athletes? I keep hearing and it’s like, ‘How does that work? It doesn’t make sense.’”

 ?? M. SPENCER GREEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The entrance to The Big Ten Experience on the ground floor of the Big Ten conference headquarte­rs in Rosemont, Ill.
M. SPENCER GREEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The entrance to The Big Ten Experience on the ground floor of the Big Ten conference headquarte­rs in Rosemont, Ill.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States