USA TODAY International Edition

College football season still in flux

- Paul Myerberg

The cautious optimism that accompanie­d the return of athletes to campuses across the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n earlier this month has been muted by a recent series of setbacks with the potential to alter when the upcoming season begins and ends, in turn threatenin­g the state of the entire schedule.

In particular, two developmen­ts – the rash of COVID- 19 breakouts among teams and remarks from national health officials on a possible second wave to the pandemic – have birthed an increased level of uncertaint­y at a time when teams were beginning to embrace the sense of normalcy provided by the massive influx of players and coaches returning to college campuses.

“I think everybody is seeing the numbers and paying attention to what’s going on, obviously. I think everybody’s hope was that, you know, things would be declining instead of decreasing,” said SMU coach Sonny Dykes.

“But at the same time, I think everybody feels good about their plan. I know we certainly feel good about ours.”

Players began filing back into football facilities beginning on June 1 with the NCAA’s decision to allow voluntary team activities. Last week, the Division I Council approved a plan for practices to begin six weeks before the scheduled start of the season “that balances the proper precaution­s due to the COVID- 19 pandemic with the need for an acclimatiz­ation period to safely return to play,” said council chair Grace Calhoun, AD at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

But this return has been joined by a flurry of positive tests for COVID- 19, several large enough to raise eyebrows: Clemson said last week that 23 players had tested positive for the coronaviru­s, while at least 30 players at LSU have been quarantine­d after testing positive for COVID- 19 or coming into contact with someone who had.

“Obviously, something happened,” LSU coach Ed Orgeron said Tuesday. “This is the new lay of the land. It’s something that we have to work through. I think our guys are doing a very good job of adjusting, and we should be fine.”

Kansas State said Saturday that it was suspending workouts for two weeks after 14 athletes tested positive. Among teams in the Group of Five, Houston and Boise State have suspended voluntary activities after several players tested positive, with Boise State shutting down campus entirely until Sunday after seeing eight cases of the coronaviru­s during a two- day span.

Overall, USA TODAY Sports identified 37 universiti­es with FBS programs, roughly a quarter of the FBS, that have reported positive cases of COVID- 19 among athletes and/ or staff at a time when the overall number of cases is soaring in several states. ( Not every university is revealing test results, meaning the total may be significantly higher, and not all of the athletes are football players.) Nine states reported record highs in their seven- day average of new reported cases on Monday. Texas and California, which combined account for 19 FBS programs, saw new single- day high numbers of documented cases within the past week.

“Obviously, we’re all very hopeful and we’re all preparing for a season, for fall camp,” said San Diego State coach Brady Hoke. “As we’ve gone through this, we’ve tried to be very measured at how we get back together. We will move along as we get directed to move along.”

Teams and conference­s on the Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n level have already altered plans for September. The recent rise in cases around Memphis led to the cancellati­on of the Southern Heritage Classic, which was to feature Jackson State and Tennessee State on Sept. 12 in the annual matchup between teams from historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es. The Patriot League, which has five games scheduled against FBS teams in September, announced Monday that non- conference games would not be held before Sept. 4 and that no Patriot League team would fly to competitio­ns – meaning one of those five matchups, Fordham at Hawaii on Sept. 12, could become the first cancellati­on to the FBS schedule.

Meanwhile, the rise in coronaviru­s cases comes as national health officials are issuing stark warnings about the possibilit­y that the pandemic lingers into the fall or that the country experience­s a second wave of outbreaks.

Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said on CNN that unless football players are “essentiall­y in a bubble – insulated from the community and they are tested nearly every day – it would be very hard to see how football is able to be played this fall.”

This potential for a second wave has many schools opting to end in- person classes around Thanksgivi­ng, in an effort to reduce the number of students leaving and returning to campus and limit the exposure to COVID- 19.

During a call held earlier this month with other sports executives and congressio­nal Republican­s, NCAA President Mark Emmert said the regular season could end around Thanksgivi­ng, casting conference championsh­ips and the postseason in doubt.

“We are planning to play the semifinals Jan. 1 and the championsh­ip game Jan. 11 as scheduled,” College Football Playoff executive director Bill Hancock said Tuesday.

The biggest game of Michigan’s season – the regular- season finale at rival Ohio State – is scheduled for Nov. 28, after students at both schools have been sent away for the semester. “Michigan Athletics is working with our public health experts and consulting with the Big Ten and NCAA on determinin­g whether our student- athletes can safely return to competitio­n this fall,” President Mark Schlissel said Monday.

That athletes were even able to return to campuses this month is reason for optimism. Several coaches told USA TODAY in March, when the coronaviru­s pandemic was beginning to spread, that early July was the latest teams could return to normalcy and meet the start of the upcoming season. While additional coronaviru­s outbreaks could derail preseason workouts and practices, teams have been given enough time to prepare for the season to begin as scheduled.

 ??  ?? It’s still not clear if we’ll have scenes in the fall such as this one at Clemson. DAWSON POWERS/ USA TODAY SPORTS
It’s still not clear if we’ll have scenes in the fall such as this one at Clemson. DAWSON POWERS/ USA TODAY SPORTS

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