The Phoenix

PAC sports: ‘Full steam ahead’

Fall sports plan taking shape in Pioneer Athletic Conference

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

The Pioneer Athletic Conference’s plan to play continues to take shape for the fall.

The league leadership met Tuesday to further establish the outlook of the fall sports season that has been delayed and affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

One takeaway can’t be overlooked though: there will be PAC athletics this fall.

“At this point we see ourselves moving forward,” PAC President and Pottsgrove High School Principal Dr. Bill Ziegler said. “As of now, we are scheduled full steam ahead.”

Not all PAC schools and teams are all systems go, a fact not lost on Ziegler and league leadership.

“We have a number of schools that are out of fall sports and we support the design of an alternate fall schedule, such as in the spring, we would support that,” Ziegler said. “I know a number of our schools in the conference would like to see that happen.”

At present, Boyertown, Methacton, Owen J. Roberts, Perkiomen Valley, Spring-Ford and Upper Perkiomen are participan­ts in all sports. Pottsgrove (all sports except football), Upper Merion (tennis, cross country, golf) and Phoenixvil­le (golf, singles tennis) are partial participan­ts while Norristown, Pope John Paul II and Pottstown have opted out of all interschol­astic competitio­n in the fall.

The participat­ion list is not considered final though. While most participat­ing schools are expected to proceed as currently aligned, only Upper Perkiomen, Pottsgrove, Upper Merion and Phoenixvil­le have had official fall sport-specific school board votes.

During this week’s league meeting, league-wide athlete screening guidelines were approved. Additional­ly, the league will allow schools to seek out nonleague competitio­n after the completion of league play.

Non-league opportunit­ies will be available, but not as abundant as a normal season: the Central League and Ches-Mont League have indefinite­ly postponed fall sports, as has the majority of the Philadelph­ia Catholic League. Twenty-one of 24 schools in the Suburban One League are competing in fall sports.

For league scheduling, the PAC is exploring ‘pods’ where teams in field hockey or soccer would play twice — home and away — in a given week.

“We’re looking at scheduling in ‘pods’ in field hockey and boys and girls soccer to help with contact tracing,” Ziegler said. “That way we keep within the same grouping of kids the whole week.”

The league is on course for Sept. 7 as the start of preseason, with interschol­astic competitio­ns allowed to begin Sept. 25. Golf matches will be afforded an earlier start, on Sept. 14.

Scheduling is taking shape at present with the goal of them being set in the near future.

“We don’t have an actual deadline, but we’re working on it right now and with competitio­n starting Sept. 25 we understand the importance of getting that out pretty quickly so our goal is to have that out sooner than later,” Ziegler said.

The state of Pennsylvan­ia relaxed its spectator guidelines on Wednesday. Spectators may now attend sporting events but will count toward state limits (25 indoor, 250 outdoor) and must adhere to social distancing and facial covering guidelines

The Pioneer Athletic Conference playoffs and championsh­ips have traditiona­lly been a fixture of the mid-October calendar. But in a year that has featured constant questions over any games happening, league playoffs have not been discussed for now.

“Right now we’re just trying to get one game in,” Ziegler said, keenly aware of the unpredicta­ble current climate.

The league’s uniform screening guidelines include a screening questionna­ire and temperatur­e check from a member of the student-athlete’s home district. A temperatur­e more than 100.3 (NFHS guideline) will disqualify a participan­t. The screening informatio­n will be recorded and signed off on by the athletic director, trainer or principal.

Boyertown is currently in the midst of a COVID-19 related shutdown after a football player tested positive last Friday. Ziegler expressed that the league intends to stay flexible with anything that comes its way in the most unusual of seasons.

“We understand that at any time a school could be shut down due to a COVID related case, but we talked internally about still moving forward and making the best of it as a league. If a school can’t participat­e, we’ll look at rescheduli­ng,” Ziegler said.

“We know how important athletics are to kids so we want to do everything we can to support them and get them playing safely.”

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