The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Outbreak reveals vulnerabil­ities

- By Ralph D. Russo

Those working to get college sports up and running have been hoping the return of profession­al sports would provide valuable informatio­n that could aid their efforts to play through a pandemic.

A COVID-19 outbreak for a Major League Baseball team three days into its season forced two games to be postponed July 27 and brought a glimpse of how difficult the task will be.

“We’re still learning things and this is a data point, there’s no doubt about that,” Big 12 Commission­er Bob Bowlsby said. “We’re doing what our scientists and doctors are telling us to do. Move forward slowly and constantly reevaluate.

“I think this will just be the new normal. There will be ebbs and flows and there’ll be disruption­s.”

Like MLB — and unlike the NBA, NHL, WNBA and MLS — college sports will try to conduct their seasons outside a controlled, virusfree bubble. The first major college football games in an evolving schedule that should start to come into focus this week are a little more than a month away.

COVID-19 flare-ups have shut down voluntary workouts throughout July at about two dozen major college football programs, including Ohio State, North Carolina, Kansas State and

Houston. Last week Michigan State and Rutgers both announced positive tests among players and staff led to 14-day quarantine for their entire teams.

Full-blown practices for teams trying to start their seasons around the Labor Day weekend will begin by early next week.

Greater challenges lie ahead and what happened to the Marlins could be an ominous sign, said Zachary Binney, an epidemiolo­gist at Oxford College of Emory University.

“The biggest thing that I see is this is a demonstrat­ion of just how quickly COVID-19 can rip through a clubhouse and a team even in a sport like baseball where practices and games are pretty conducive to physical distancing,” Binney said. “It’s definitely alarming. You have to expect things would look even worse in a sport like football where the practices have contact, the games have contact and you have bigger rosters. Because the virus getting into a team is just a numbers game. The more people you have the more likely it sneaks in.”

The Miami Marlins outbreak rippled through baseball. Not only was their home opener with Baltimore postponed, but so was the Phillies’ game against the Yankees. The Marlins played at Philadelph­ia on Sunday after several players tested positive and the next day the total number of positive players and staffers was more than a dozen.

When the Marlins or the Phillies will play next is unclear.

Lucia Mullen, an epidemiolo­gist and senior analyst at Johns Hopkins University, said there could be lessons to take from how soon those teams are competing again.

“The next kind of pinnacle that other sports should be looking at is did they find (the infected) fast enough? Were they able to find all potential cases and stop the spread there or have they been too slow in their testing, in their contact tracing, that someone slipped through and we’re going to see more and more cases pop up?” Mullen said. “Because if that’s the case, we’re not testing enough.”

Recent NCAA guidelines recommende­d testing college football players once a week during the season, within 72 hours of a game. The Power Five conference­s are working on their own protocols which make a similar recommenda­tion.

Whether that is enough to prevent outbreaks that shut down teams, especially when more students return to campuses and college towns, remains to be seen.

Clinical aspects aside, college sports could benefit from a few smooth weeks of MLB playing and NFL opening training camps, If pro leagues struggle to keep their teams operating, questions about playing with unpaid college students will arise.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Big 12 commission­er Bob Bowlsby discusses canceling the remaining conference tournament games March 12 in Kansas City, Mo.
CHARLIE RIEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Big 12 commission­er Bob Bowlsby discusses canceling the remaining conference tournament games March 12 in Kansas City, Mo.

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