The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Ivy League sports return as way they went out: cautiously

- By JIMMY GOLEN AP Sports Writer

CAMBRIDGE, MASS. (AP) >> The Ivy League was the first conference to scuttle its basketball postseason when the pandemic broke out during March Madness a year and a half ago. It was the first Division I conference to suspend fall sports in July 2020.

Now the schools are getting back on the field the same way they left: cautiously.

All eight Ivies are requiring that their football teams be vaccinated for COVID-19 — just like the rest of the students on campus. Ivy League executive director Robin Harris said this month that the goal had been reached with “very limited medical or religious” exceptions.

“While COVID-19 is very much a part of our lives, we believe in the campus policies,” she said. “This allows us to plan for a regular football season.”

Although the alliance of eight prestigiou­s private schools in the Northeast has always been more about academics than athletics, the Ivy League decision to cancel its men’s and women’s basketball tournament­s before anyone else on March 10, 2020, was a turning point in the response to the pandemic. Other college and profession­al leagues soon followed amid a worldwide sports shutdown.

In the almost 18 months since, the Ivies have remained idle with the exception of scattered individual­s or teams competing in some one-off, nonconfere­nce events, including the NCAA rowing championsh­ips. That ended when all eight women’s soccer teams opened their seasons on Aug. 27, with Harvard playing Fairfield in the Crimson’s first intercolle­giate sporting event since March 8, 2020.

“You don’t always appreciate how much you miss something until it’s taken from you,” Harvard football coach Tim Murphy said.

Since then, players were able to do different things to stay in shape, depending on restrictio­ns in their home states or countries. And because of the varied local restrictio­ns, players returned this fall in a wide rage of fitness levels.

“I think we did the best job we possibly could have, and it’s going to show this season,” Brown running back Allen Smith said. “It’s been a long time coming, so we could not be more excited to get back to Brown football.”

Brown did have spring football practice, but Columbia had few students — and thus, players — on campus last fall, and mostly seniors in the spring; Harvard had some freshman last fall and a small contingent in the spring.

Murphy said his team will have just eight padded practices in almost two years between its 50-43, double-overtime loss to Yale in The Game and its 2021 opener Sept. 18 at Georgetown.

“We’ve all had different on-campus footprints,” he said. “It does leave a lot of question marks.”

As they return, players will face new protocols to combat the spread of the delta variant.

In addition to the vaccine requiremen­t, Dartmouth players will wear masks indoors, with improved air filtration and circulatio­n; some meetings on the Hanover, New Hampshire, campus will be held outdoors. Cambridge has a city-wide indoor mask mandate that goes into effect on Sept. 3.

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