The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

SEC football opens minus big crowds, tailgating, some stars

- By John Zenor

Southeaste­rn Conference football games won’t have their normal scenes of packed stadiums and partying tailgaters.

Gone, too, are some of the league’s best players, including LSU wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase and muchantici­pated new Georgia quarterbac­k Jamie Newman. In the season of COVID-19, SEC teams finally open their 10-game league only schedule on Saturday.

It mixes excitement with a healthy dose of uncertaint­y. How many games will be canceled or postponed? Which teams can avoid being decimated by positive tests at a certain position or losing their starting quarterbac­k?

Even SEC Commission­er Greg Sankey said Wednesday: “I still am in the hold my breath moment a bit.”

So are coaches. Players are still opting out leading up to the first games, including Vanderbilt linebacker Feleti Afemui and Texas A&M linebacker Anthony Hines III.

Sankey, meanwhile, does have a new definition of what qualifies as a successful season.

“Being in Atlanta on Dec. 19 naming a conference champion, I would define that as a success,” he said.

Most SEC coaches are playing it close to the vest in identifyin­g players who will miss the game because of COVID-19, if they have any. Their silence is as much about a competitiv­e edge as players’ privacy.

As Florida coach Dan Mullen said: “You’ll find out Saturday.”

The situations could be fluid, with testing continuing during the week. Alabama’s coach, Nick Saban, said Monday there weren’t any players for the secondrank­ed Crimson Tide out for the game with COVIDrelat­ed issues.

“But we’re testing every day so that’s kind of an ongoing process as to how that goes,” Saban said.

No. 8 Auburn had a halfdozen players returning from quarantine on Tuesday, coach Gus Malzahn said.

Aside from which players will be available, another adjustment will be the mostly empty stadiums.

Most teams are allowing 20-25% capacity at games, though Vanderbilt won’t have fans through at least October. There’s also no tailgating on campus, or band performanc­es.

There’s no way to measure the impact of COVID-19 will have on this weekend, much less for the season. But there have already been some winners and losers with players opting out, creating unexpected challenges for teams.

• Texas A&M has had at least five players opt out, including leading receiver Jhamon Ausbon, who had 66 catches for 872 yards last season. Hines, the No. 2 tackler last season, just announced his decision on Sunday. Wide receiver Camron Buckley is also out for the season with a knee injury. Also sitting out is projected starting cornerback Elijah Blades, along with backup quarterbac­k James Foster and safety Derrick Tucker.

• Losing Chase was a big blow for an LSU team already replacing Heisman Trophy-winning quarterbac­k Joe Burrows. Chase set SEC records with 1,780 receiving yards and 20 touchdowns en route to winning the Biletnikof­f Award as the nation’s top receiver. Safety Kary Vincent (47 tackles, four intercepti­ons) and standout defensive tackle Tyler Shelvin are also opting out.

Coach Ed Orgeron is hoping his team is largely in the clear for much of the season because “most of our players have caught it.” He said those players who have recovered from COVID-19 don’t have to be tested again for 90 days under SEC protocols.

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