The Mercury News

Coronaviru­s reality: Reschedule­d start is threatened

- ON HIGH SCHOOLS

Aarren BaDedra

I badly want high school sports back, but the grim reality is setting in. It’s not looking good.

I sit and work in my home office every day, in the room next to my daughter’s.

Sophia is a senior. She would’ve been just finishing her final season of high school water polo. And who knows? Her team might have won a league championsh­ip and maybe a couple of games in the playoffs.

But like thousands of teenagers across the state, she sits and waits, the thrill of competitio­n relegated to social- distancing conditioni­ng workouts with her club and high school teams.

We all know the California Interschol­astic Federation and its sections have set a date for sports to return.

That December date has been circled on the calendar since the CIF made the announceme­nt in July.

But what does that date mean? The CIF wants to proceed as planned and will do so until told otherwise by state and local health officials. But are those officials — not to mention school boards — really going

to flash a green light in the next couple of weeks given that coronaviru­s case numbers are exploding and reopening plans are shifting in reverse for many counties?

Dr. Mark Ghaly, secretary of the California Health and Human Services Agency, was asked specifical­ly about high school and youth sports in a news conference Tuesday.

His response felt like another official kicking the can a few more feet down the road. He told colleague Dan Albano of the Southern California Newspaper Group that new guidelines will be coming “soon” for competitio­n in high school and youth sports, adding that decisions could be determined by the state’s COVID-19 tier system for each county.

“We are working closely with CIF and other youth sports leaders, interschol­astic sports leaders, to ensure that we are aligned in the guidance,” Ghaly said. “It will provide clarity as to when

competitio­n can take place.”

Back in the summer, when the CIF announced that sports would be delayed for four months, some coaches worried that things might be even worse in the winter with the pandemic joining arms with flu season.

But we all remained cautiously optimistic that the virus would somehow magically improve and sports would come back in force when December arrived.

Now that optimism feels like a prayer.

Late last month, Bay Area Preps HQ started a series of stories to assess the temperatur­e in the room, doing Q& A’s with commission­ers from some of the region’s top leagues. Having read or edited all of them to this point, I know the commission­ers are doing their best to be ready when the time to play comes. But will it come?

At this point, I can’t help but think of them as airport passengers on standby, waiting, hoping, praying that their names are called, knowing full well that they might not be — that practice might not start in December

and games might not be played in January.

“There’s a lot of hurdles we have to get through to have games in January,” Jolene Fugate, the commission­er of the West Catholic Athletic League, told our Shayna Rubin last month. “The biggest hurdle is working with our counties.

“There are so many things with the county that come first. There’s a lot of things on the county’s plate that fall in front of high school athletics, so I understand why it hasn’t been a focal point. The biggest hurdle will be to get informatio­n that we can use. They’re working with our task force, we just don’t have guidelines.”

In the meantime, parents such as myself try to stay hopeful but — at least in my case — honest with my own kid who wants one more season with her teammates.

She knows the reality. She knows that cases are on the rise and testing, which is mandatory for college and pro sports, is far too costly at the high school level.

“The only thing that that I can tell you about testing is that there’s not

a school district probably in the state of California that would be able to afford the kind of testing they’re talking about with profession­al athletes,” Steve Ahonen, commission­er of the Bay Valley Athletic League, told our Curtis Pashelka. “The resources just aren’t there.”

My daughter’s last high school game was a year ago, in the North Coast Section playoffs. Her team, Washington-Fremont, played FoothillPl­easanton at Northgate in Walnut Creek.

It was one of the most memorable games my kid’s team played, a 10-9 triple- overtime loss that was heartbreak­ing but had us all looking ahead to this season given the number of juniors who would be seniors this fall.

To think that might be it saddens us to no end.

But as much as we don’t want to admit it, as much as we want to keep hope afloat until the last possible second, the chances of the reschedule­d season starting “on time” are hanging by a fragile thread.

We know that. And I have to think we’re not alone.

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