The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio State football players surpass 90% vaccinatio­n rate

- Joey Kaufman

When coronaviru­s cases kept rising among Ohio State football players in the days before their Thanksgivi­ng weekend trip to Illinois last year, it cost them the game.

Due to the outbreak, the schools called off the contest.

But it failed to crater the Buckeyes' season. They were not handed a loss. It was declared a no-contest. They remained unbeaten in the conference standings.

A similar situation this fall would see a different result. Under a newly announced policy by the Big Ten, teams are subject to a forfeit if they are unable to play due to COVID-19 issues in the upcoming season.

High vaccinatio­n rates throughout the league are expected to guard against potential cancellati­ons. That includes the Buckeyes, who coach Ryan Day says have more than 90% of their players vaccinated against the virus.

Fully vaccinated players are exempt from routine coronaviru­s testing unless they show symptoms or are exposed to a positive case as part of the athletic department's protocols. They are also excluded from quarantini­ng through contact tracing.

All Ohio State students are required to have received at least one dose of a vaccine against COVID-19 by Oct. 15 after the university issued a mandate on Tuesday. (There are limited exemptions for medical, religious and personal reasons). The fraction of unvaccinat­ed football players, hovering around 10, should continue to dwindle in the coming weeks.

For now, the Buckeyes will begin their season at Minnesota on Sept. 2 with a roster that is heavily immunized. It happened with minimal pressure. Assessing the high percentage of player vaccinatio­ns in an interview with The Dispatch, Day said he used tact in approachin­g them about getting the shot.

“I never pushed it on them,” he said. “I've just educated them, and they have to make their decision. The only thing I said is there's risk with everything you do. There's risk getting it. There's risk not getting it. There's risk testing positive. There's risk not playing. There's all these risks, and so they have to make a decision. I think it just speaks to how serious they're taking their health, but also how serious they take the season.”

The memories of last season loom large enough. Positive tests or contact tracing would prompt players to isolate for more than a week inside a hotel room or elsewhere.

After the Buckeyes' game at Illinois was canceled, they had nearly two dozen players unavailabl­e for the following week at Michigan State. Day himself was sidelined for the game against the Spartans after testing positive.

It was among the most difficult aspects of going through the pandemicsh­ortened season of 2020.

“They've been through it before, and I've said to some of those guys who have gone through it, ‘Do you remember what that was like being out for 10 days on the contact tracing?' ” Day said. “Just sitting in your room. That's not good.”

The trend runs counter to those in their age group, a majority of which remain unvaccinat­ed. The CDC vaccine tracker showed that only 46.7% of those ages 18-24 had been fully vaccinated through Tuesday.

Day, who was vaccinated in the spring, said it remains important to find ways to manage COVID-19.

The highly contagious delta variant has led to the largest increase in coronaviru­s cases in Ohio since February despite the availabili­ty of vaccines.

“Like the flu, I'm not sure this will ever go away,” Day said.” So finding ways to deal with it is probably what we're going to have to figure out as a society. I know that our country's been a little bit polarized on some of these things, but trying to find ways to bring people together again and move forward and deal with this thing, because from what everything I've read, it's not going anywhere.”

When Day met with The Dispatch on Tuesday morning, it was several hours before the university's vaccine requiremen­t had been announced.

The issue, including its effect on vaccine holdouts, was unaddresse­d. It was, though, touched on later by athletic director Gene Smith, who called the mandate “a great thing” and would “really embrace that,” noting the Pfizer-biontech shot had received full FDA approval.

“It's proven to be our safest ally — the vaccinatio­n — and I want our kids to get vaccinated and be able to compete and not be susceptibl­e to the virus in a longterm way,” he said. “So I'm excited about it, then. Just so glad our president (Kristina M. Johnson) and the Board of Trustees made the move, and we'll see how it goes.”

Dispatch reporter Bill Rabinowitz contribute­d to this story jkaufman@dispatch.com @joeyrkaufm­an

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