USA TODAY US Edition

College football returns this weekend

The first game of the season, and the first since the shutdown, will give a glimpse of how teams will deal with the pandemic.

- Paul Myerberg

There will be college football on Saturday night. More than five months after the coronaviru­s pandemic shut down all sports, and even as several major conference­s have opted against competing this season while others attempt to manage outbreaks of positive cases, the 2020 college football season will begin roughly as scheduled with a game between two teams from the Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n.

Central Arkansas and Austin Peay (9 ET, ESPN) were originally scheduled to complete a home-andhome series in Conway, Arkansas, before the pandemic led the two teams to shift the meeting to the Cramton Bowl in Montgomery, Alabama.

Both teams reached last season’s FCS playoffs, with Central Arkansas advancing to the second round and Austin Peay reaching the quarterfin­als in winning a school-record 11 games under coach Mark Hudspeth, who abruptly resigned in July, citing the need to spend more time with his family. He was replaced on an interim basis by associate head coach Marquase Lovings.

As the only game of the opening weekend – known as Week Zero – and broadcast in prime time on ESPN, the matchup is expected to draw an audience starving for football content.

“This is different,” Central Arkansas athletic director Brad Teague. “And certainly because we’re the only game on Saturday and the first game of the college football season, the first NCAA contest since COVID shut it down in the spring, there is a lot more excitement.”

The chance to play on ESPN “is thrilling for these guys,” Teague said. “They’re very motivated and very excited. For our brand and for our national recognitio­n and publicity, we’re very excited about that. We know it’s going to be very positive for us.”

The season opener provides a glimpse into how teams will handle the logistics of scheduling, planning and playing games while managing the health and

safety concerns still posed by COVID-19.

Programs in the Bowl Subdivisio­n have also been forced to reschedule individual games and even create entirely new schedules as conference­s and specific teams drop out of competitio­n.

The Power Five leagues that have remained on track to begin the season in September have added conference games to the regular-season schedule.

Both teams will drive to the game on Friday and stay in a hotel overnight.

Austin Peay will travel in four buses, one more than usual, with each bus at half capacity and with one person stationed per row.

Every person in the Central Arkansas caravan will wear an N95 mask while on the bus, Teague said.

Central Arkansas’ testing protocols began with giving every student-athlete a gateway test – an initial test for the coronaviru­s – when they returned to campus.

The athletic department has been testing athletes once a week since early August. There have been 300 tests administer­ed across the past two weeks and just one positive result, Teague said, with the latest round of tests given on Wednesday.

In addition, Central Arkansas is requiring the bus drivers tasked with transporti­ng the team to take a test for COVID-19 and have a negative result.

Austin Peay had an outbreak of 11 positive cases in June, leading the university to shut down all athletics for three weeks to recover and reevaluate existing protocols and procedures.

Several programs that discussed the logistics behind traveling to games with USA TODAY Sports said that roster sizes won’t change but the total size of the normal travel party will decline by removing cheerleade­rs, bands and superfluou­s staff members.

The smaller groups from Central Arkansas and Austin Peay will stick to the same distancing protocols used on campus or inside football facilities, limiting the amount of interactio­n players, coaches and staff members will have outside of hotel rooms.

“It’ll be a little different because under normal circumstan­ces parents and friends could linger in the hotel lobby and hang out with players on the team,” said Austin Peay athletic director Gerald Harrison. “But that’s not happening now.”

The Cramton Bowl will limit attendance to a quarter of its 25,000-seat capacity, mirroring similar benchmarks used in the Power Five.

Every Southeaste­rn Conference school that has announced football attendance plans will allow capacity around 25% while adding measures requiring face coverings and prohibitin­g tailgating while shifting solely to mobile ticketing.

Both Central Arkansas and Austin Peay were allotted 400 tickets for athletes’ families and guests, Harrison said, while the remainder of tickets were sold online. Unsurprisi­ngly, the game is a sellout. “We also understand the scrutiny that’s going to come with us playing while many others are not and being the first game when many have pushed back to September. We understand that,” Teague said.

“We’re ready to face those questions and talk about our safety protocols that have been in place really since June.”

 ?? ROBERT HANASHIRO/ USA TODAY ??
ROBERT HANASHIRO/ USA TODAY
 ?? GEORGE ROBINSON/THE LEAF-CHRONICLE ?? Central Arkansas defeated Austin Peay 24-16 last year.
GEORGE ROBINSON/THE LEAF-CHRONICLE Central Arkansas defeated Austin Peay 24-16 last year.

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