Pea Ridge Times

Return to training

- HENRY APPLE

Jeff Williams would have loved to use this week to help implement the offensive and defensive schemes he will have Pea Ridge’s football team employ in the fall.

Instead, the Blackhawks’ new head coach could be seen with a bottle of disinfecta­nt in one hand and a towel in the other as he disinfecte­d weightlift­ing equipment between sessions, the result of protocol under new Arkansas Activities Associatio­n covid-19 guidelines that began Monday, June 1.

“We’re under weird times,” Williams said. “But me coming with a new job, it’s all about building relationsh­ips, meeting our kids and getting them back into the routine.

“We’ll be able to do some fundamenta­l stuff — as much as we can because we didn’t have spring practices. The kids are getting back in here and things are getting a little more normal. That makes a big difference, but obviously there are obstacles like wearing masks and gloves and wiping things down. The main thing we want to do is be safe for our kids.”

High school sports teams were allowed to start workouts Monday, the first such activity since

the coronaviru­s pandemic forced the AAA to implement a special athletic dead period in March. In addition to the guidelines set by Gov. Asa Hutchinson and the Arkansas Department of Health, the AAA also has issued “acclimatiz­ation reopening guidelines for the close contact team sports, which includes basketball, football, soccer, volleyball, wrestling, cheerleade­r and dance.”

Those guidelines include the Department of Health’s earlier directive, as well as stipulatio­ns that no contact equipment be worn, the following of wet bulb globe temperatur­e-torest ratios, as well as practice guidelines. Athletes may practice a maximum of five days per calendar week and practice lengths will begin with one hour for the first two days and work up to a maximum of 3 hours for days 14-25.

“The only thing we have done with our doctors on our sports medicine advisory committee is — since the first time in the history of interschol­astic athletics — students have been de-acclimatiz­ed,” said AAA deputy executive director Joey Walters. “Normally, you’re worried about acclimatiz­ation, but students have been de-acclimatiz­ed by not being in practice for 11 to 12 weeks. There’s no model out there currently for de-acclimatiz­ed athletes.”

Williams said he had about 75 players who showed up Monday for the first workout, with only one person being advised to stay home because of fever. Nobody was sent home because of a high fever when asked the routine health questions.

“It was really good,” Williams said. “You never know what to expect on the first day, but there were some timing issues we had to fix. I’m sure everybody else in the state of Arkansas is having to find out how much time to take to check in the kids, get warmups in, making sure you’re safe and cleaning bars.

“Conditioni­ng-wise, we’re easing them in on getting back into shape. We don’t want to rush anything and get somebody injured. So we’re kinda easing into things and getting them back into a rhythm. The kids are great and responding well.”

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette photograph by Flip Putthoff ?? Players on the Pea Ridge Blackhawks team are back in practice in Blackhawk Stadium.
NWA Democrat-Gazette photograph by Flip Putthoff Players on the Pea Ridge Blackhawks team are back in practice in Blackhawk Stadium.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States