Yuma Sun

Virus upheaval strains integrity of unusual college football season

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No. 3 Ohio State and No. 13 Wisconsin, the teams favored to play for the Big Ten championsh­ip, have already had a combined three games canceled because of COVID-19.

A spate of postponeme­nts in the Southeaste­rn Conference has created the distinct possibilit­y that neither No. 1 Alabama nor No. 6 Florida will play all its games.

And the most important Atlantic Coast Conference game of the season was played without the Heisman Trophy favorite, Clemson quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence, because he was recovering from the coronaviru­s.

As virus disruption­s mount and the end of college football’s regular season draws closer, the possibilit­y grows that conference championsh­ips, major awards and even College Football Playoff participan­ts will be determined in very large part by COVID-19.

“We’ve all accepted this is anything but a normal year,” ACC Commission­er John Swofford said.

Pittsburgh’s game at Georgia Tech this weekend on Thursday became the 56th game involving Bowl Subdivisio­n teams to be postponed or canceled since revised schedules were set in late August – including nine scheduled for this weekend and 10 for last.

The total number of FBS games played so far is 310, meaning about 15% of the schedule through 10 weeks has been impacted. The number has increased recently in part because all FBS conference­s are now playing, with the Pac-12 and Mid-American Conference returning last week, but it has also coincided with surging COVID-19 cases across the country.

In major college football, five postponed games have already been made up and another 24 have been reschedule­d with the Dec. 19 end date little more than a month away. As days come off the calendar and makeup dates become tougher to find, conference­s will have to put more emphasis on the games that matter most.

Pushing back the playoff could provide more opportunit­y to complete the regular season. The semifinals are set for Jan. 1 at the Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl and the championsh­ip game for Jan. 11 in Miami Gardens, Florida. But the idea of rescheduli­ng the CFP does not seem to have traction among the conference commission­ers who will ultimately make that call.

“At some point we have to have a finish line,” SEC Commission­er Greg Sankey said.

Delaying conference championsh­ip games a week would put them on Christ

mas weekend.

“So going farther into December, I don’t think is a workable option,” Big 12 Commission­er Bob Bowlsby said.

Among the Power Five, the Big 12 has had just one league game postponed: No. 14 Oklahoma State at Baylor was reschedule­d for Dec. 12, the week before the Big 12 title game.

“I’m a long ways from declaring victory,” Bowlsby said. “We could at any time be right where the SEC is this week.”

The ACC, which started conference play earliest among Power Five conference­s, has postponed five league games. One has already been made up and another will be Saturday when Louisville plays at Virginia. The other three, including No. 2 Notre Dame at Wake Forest, are slated for Dec. 12.

“You know, when you have 15 schools with 11 games and all 15 still have a chance to play 11 games, you have to feel good about it,” Swofford said. “But you also understand that can change and it can change in a hurry.”

Still, the ACC race has already been heavily impacted by the virus. No. 4 Clemson lost in double-overtime at Notre Dame without Lawrence, leaving the Fighting Irish well positioned to reach the ACC title game. If the Tigers can win a league championsh­ip rematch with the Irish, it could set up well for both to make the playoff. But would the result in South Bend, Indiana, have been the same with Lawrence?

The Big Ten and Pac-12 left themselves no leeway to make up games by starting their seasons so late after initially postponing to spring.

Not even four weeks in, the Big Ten’s top contenders are already in precarious positions.

Wisconsin (1-0) returns to action this week after an outbreak forced two cancellati­ons. The Badgers can’t afford to miss another game. The Big Ten requires a minimum of six to be eligible

to play in its championsh­ip game.

Ohio State had its game Saturday at Maryland canceled because of an outbreak with the Terrapins. At most the Buckeyes will play seven regular-season games and the Big Ten championsh­ip.

“When you do everything right and make all these sacrifices, it’s hard,” Ohio State coach Ryan Day said on his weekly radio show Thursday.

The College Football Playoff has not set a minimum requiremen­t for games played, but conference­s playing more have already been pushing for the selection committee to take note of the number of data points each team accumulate­s.

The SEC’s pile-up of postponeme­nts this week left it with two games that have no makeup date: Alabama at LSU and No. 12 Georgia at Missouri.

The SEC left Dec. 12 as an open date to makeup games, but LSU already has one that day with Florida. The Gators are in the driver’s seat to win the East and play in the SEC championsh­ip a week later, possibly against West leader Alabama.

Sankey didn’t want to look that far ahead, but the possibilit­y of one championsh­ip game participan­t having to play the week before while the other is idle is far from ideal.

The Big 12 could face a similar situation if Oklahoma State qualifies for the championsh­ip, and needs to play Baylor the week before to clinch a spot.

What about the Heisman? Lawrence sat out two games, Ohio State’s Justin Fields has now missed a game. Alabama quarterbac­k Mac Jones won’t get a nationally televised, prime-time game Saturday against LSU. Does all this help Florida quarterbac­k Kyle Trask?

All the normal November chatter about championsh­ip races and Heisman chases seems especially tenuous this season.

“I’m driven to a ‘Wayne’s World’ quote about living in the now,” Sankey said. “I’m living in the now, man.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS SATURDAY FILE PHOTO, Clemson quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence (16) leaves the field with his teammates after Clemson lost to Notre Dame 47-40 in two overtimes during a game in South Bend, Ind.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS SATURDAY FILE PHOTO, Clemson quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence (16) leaves the field with his teammates after Clemson lost to Notre Dame 47-40 in two overtimes during a game in South Bend, Ind.

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