The Commercial Appeal

FCS players facing a long year

- Eric Olson

North Dakota State has played 16 football games in a season twice and no fewer than 14 every year since 2010.

Now imagine the Bison playing 27 or 28 in a calendar year.

It could happen, considerin­g they have won eight of the last nine Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n titles.

With the COVID-19 pandemic pushing the 2020 FCS season from fall to spring, and the 2021 fall season planned to be played as usual, it begs the question: How much football is too much football?

Sports medicine experts are wary of the physical and mental toll on players who will have two seasons shoehorned into 10 or 11 months.

“I know there are some concerns about the amount of games being played in a certain months’ span but, in my opinion, we’re here to play football and I would rather play too many games than not enough,” North Dakota State junior linebacker Jackson Hankey said. “Going a fall without it for the first time in however many years it’s been since I’ve done that makes you grateful for the games you play.”

North Dakota State plays in the Missouri Valley Conference, one of three FCS leagues playing up to eight regular-season games this spring. Other leagues are playing four to seven games. The Ivy League and Mideastern Athletic Conference are idle.

The FCS playoffs, reduced from 24 to 16 teams for this spring, will be in April and May, meaning the finalists play four more games.

Preseason practice for the 11- or 12game fall regular season begins in August, with the potential for four or five more games for teams that make playoff runs into late December or early January.

The potential for an extraordin­arily high number of games is more at issue in the Missouri Valley.

Five of its current teams made the most recent playoffs.

“We’re trying to work smarter than harder,” said North Dakota State coach Matt Entz, whose team opens Sunday at home against Youngstown State. “We’re trying to have a real good understand­ing of the workload because we’re going to try to put two seasons in a calendar year.”

The NCAA said in a statement to The Associated Press the Division I Football Oversight Committee got input from experts and stakeholde­rs when putting together the FCS calendar and schools were provided scheduling flexibility to help them manage virus-related challenges.

“It was with the understand­ing that student-athlete well-being must remain the top priority,” the statement said.

Tory Lindley, president of the National Athletic Trainers’ Associatio­n, said the three areas of most concern are mental health, musculoske­letal injury and brain injury.

Normal demands on players are doubled with two seasons in one year, Lindley said, and there is no end in sight for the current COVID-19 testing protocols and safeguards.

Lindley said athletic trainers must watch for signs of anxiety, depression and other mental illness.

“When you do that every single day consecutiv­ely, plus their academic expectatio­ns and impact on their social (life) in or out of a pandemic, that’s a pretty high level of expectatio­n for an 18- to 22-year-old,” Lindley said. “If that ends in April, how quickly do you turn around and turn the switch back on and say, ‘We’re back at it now?’”

Lindley said players whose spring seasons end prematurel­y because of major injuries face the likelihood of also missing the fall season.

There also is a greater probabilit­y of soft-tissue injuries, such as hamstring pulls, if strength and conditioni­ng training during the ramp-up to preseason practice was inadequate or if there isn’t enough in-season recovery time.

The 2021 model also increases the number of exposures for possible concussion­s.

“We know getting hit in the head a thousand times a calendar year is bad, and getting hit in the head 2,000 times in a calendar year is going to be worse,” said Chris Nowinski, a former Harvard football player who cofounded the Concussion Legacy Foundation and partnered with Boston University to open a research center for chronic traumatic encephalop­athy (CTE), a degenerati­ve brain disease associated with brain trauma.

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