Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ASU postpones game vs. UCA

- GEORGE STOIA

Terry Mohajir didn’t wake up Tuesday morning expecting to postpone Arkansas State University’s football home opener against the University of Central Arkansas.

But after a few ASU players showed symptoms of covid-19 early Tuesday morning, the ASU athletic director had no choice, pushing the game back to Oct. 10 due to “being unable to assemble a full two-deep depth chart at a specific position group due to player unavailabi­lity.”

Arkansas State is not currently pausing team activities, Mohajir said.

“I’m disappoint­ed for the student-athletes, the coaches, the fan bases from both schools,” Mohajir said. “We would have been able to play the game if it wasn’t concentrat­ed into one position group. We would have found a way to play. It wasn’t that much different from what we had last week. The difference is the position group concentrat­ion.”

The decision to postpone Saturday’s game comes after Arkansas State had 15 players — including nine starters — on its depth chart absent for the Kansas State game.

The following players did not make the trip to Kansas: offensive linemen Jacob Still, Nour-Eddine Seidnaly, Justin Dutton, Ernesto Ramirez and Jennings Stanley; wide receivers Dahu Green and LeRoy Deshazor; running back Marcel Murray (injury); linebacker­s Caleb Bonner, Jeffmario Brown and Derrick Bean; defensive backs Detravion Green, Jarius Reimonenq and Tahj Herring-Wilson; and long snapper Seth Cottengim. It is unclear how many of those players were unable to play due to covid-19 or contact tracing.

Coach Blake Anderson said Saturday after the game that multiple players who weren’t expected to travel to Manhattan, Kan., ended up getting on the bus Friday because so many players were unavailabl­e.

The amount of players absent from the Kansas State game led some to believe that it might have been connected to Memphis’ outbreak, which included 20 positive tests after its game with Arkansas State on Sept. 5, according to the Memphis Commercial Appeal. After the report, Memphis senior defensive lineman O’Bryan Goodson tweeted that “Arkansas State needs to be the ones tested! We’ve been doing what we’re supposed to do, all this came after we played them!”

The tweet has since been deleted and Memphis has released a statement saying “that the majority of cases have been primarily linked to social events outside of official football activities.” Mohajir had no comment regarding Goodson’s tweet.

Mohajir reiterated the reasoning behind postponing the UCA game wasn’t the number of positive cases, but because one position group was hit hard with symptoms, which led to contact tracing and left even more players out. It is unknown how many of those players who showed symptoms were positive, considerin­g the team had not been tested for the UCA game yet with the tests previously scheduled to occur today — 72 hours prior to the game.

Mohajir did not specify which position group it is or how many players potentiall­y would have been out.

“The volume of players that were out this game was not what concerned us,” Mohajir said. “We still have people out from last week that tested positive who will be out for this week. And in one particular position group, we had to finagle some things last week to play one position group. And either contact tracing or symptomati­c or test positives, that’s what led to this decision.”

Mohajir called UCA Athletic Director Brad Teague soon after finding out the game might be in jeopardy, then let him know around noon the Red Wolves wouldn’t be able to play.

“I get it. I mean, it’s where we are,” Teague said. “He told me it wasn’t about the numbers, it was just a position and he didn’t tell me what position. I take him at his word, and I understand. That’s kind of the threshold: Can you field every position?”

The decision to move the game to Oct. 10 was the only option for the two programs, as that’s Arkansas State’s lone open date left. UCA was scheduled to play at Eastern Kentucky that day, but has now moved that game to Oct. 24.

Teague, who has been aggressive in scheduling games this fall, said he received a call from Army no more than 15 minutes after the ASU news broke asking whether the Bears wanted to play at West Point this weekend. Teague turned down the offer saying it was “too much, too fast, too far.”

While Teague is disappoint­ed Saturday’s game has been postponed, he knows that’s the reality of college football this season.

“It would have been more frustratin­g if we wouldn’t have been able to find another mutual date to play again just three weeks away. It is what it is,” Teague said. “There have been postponeme­nts all over the country that I’ve seen. It happens.

“I wasn’t just shocked. It’s OK. The problem now is, if this keeps happening further down the schedule, there aren’t mutual dates where you can just postpone dates — they’re going to be canceled. I’m hoping that doesn’t happen.”

Arkansas State and UCA aren’t the first schools to postpone a football game — Virginia, Virginia Tech, Baylor, Oklahoma State, Tulsa and others have done the same.

Mohajir and Teague both say it’s something everyone has to accept, no matter how upsetting it might be.

“The virus is frustratin­g,” Mohajir said. “What else can I say?”

 ??  ?? Arkansas State Athletic Director Terry Mohajir elected to postpone the Red Wolves’ football game against Central Arkansas on Saturday after several ASU players showed signs of covid-19. (Democrat-Gazette file photo)
Arkansas State Athletic Director Terry Mohajir elected to postpone the Red Wolves’ football game against Central Arkansas on Saturday after several ASU players showed signs of covid-19. (Democrat-Gazette file photo)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States