The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Ivy League calls off fall sports due to outbreak

- By Doug Feinberg and Jimmy Golen

The Ivy League on Wednesday became the first Division I conference to say it will not play sports this fall because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, a person with knowledge of the decision told The Associated Press. The league left open the possibilit­y of moving some seasons to the spring if the outbreak is better controlled by then.

The decision was described to the AP by a person speaking on the condition of anonymity in advance of the official announceme­nt.

Although the coalition of eight academical­ly elite schools does not grant athletic scholarshi­ps or compete for an NCAA football championsh­ip, the move could have ripple effects throughout the big business of college sports. Football players in the Power Five conference­s have already begun workouts for a season that starts on Aug. 29, even as their schools weigh whether to open their campuses to students or continue classes remotely.

The Ivy decision affects not just football but everything before Jan. 1, including soccer, field hockey, volleyball and cross country, as well as the nonconfere­nce portion of the basketball season.

Power Five conference­s told The Associated Press on Wednesday that they were still considerin­g their options. But it was the Ivy League’s March 10 decision to scuttle its postseason basketball tournament that preceded a cascade of cancellati­ons that eventually enveloped all major college and profession­al sports.

“What’s happening in other conference­s is clearly a reflection of what’s happening nationally and any decisions are made within that context,” said Dr. Chris Kratochvil, the chair of the Big Ten’s infectious disease task force, adding that there is no “hard deadline” for a decision.

“Clearly, regardless of what happens in the fall, sports are coming back eventually,” he said. “So we want to make sure that whenever that time (is) right to return to competitio­n, that we have the infrastruc­ture and the recommenda­tions in place to be able to do so safely for the student-athletes, staff, coaches, fans, students.”

Ivy League schools are spread across seven Northeaste­rn states that, as of mid-July, have seen some success at controllin­g the COVID-19 outbreak. But most of those states still ban large gatherings; under the Massachuse­tts reopening plan, Harvard would not be allowed to have fans in the stands until a vaccine is developed.

Harvard has already announced that all classes for both semesters will be held virtually; dorms will be open only to freshmen and seniors. Yale said it would limit its dorms to 60% capacity and said most classes would be conducted remotely. Princeton will also do most of its teaching online, with dorms at half capacity.

AP Sports Writers Aaron Beard, Dave Campbell, Pete Iacobelli, Larry Lage, John Marshall and John Zenor contribute­d to this story.

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ??
CHARLES KRUPA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE

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