The Reporter (Vacaville)

San Jose State, Stanford search for alternate plans

- By Elliott Almond and Shayna Rubin

While one Santa Clara County college football team searches for its new home, another one has found a solution to the county’s ban on playing and practicing contact sports.

Stanford is expected to move its football team to the Pacific Northwest in response to the county’s three-week ban on contact sports, a Pac-12 source told our Jon Wilner.

The exact location is not yet known, or possibly has not yet been determined.

Washington head coach Jimmy Lake thinks the Cardinal may be headed to Seattle: “From what I understand, they’re researchin­g facilities in the northwest to be able to practice and prepare to play their game up here in Seattle on Saturday,” he said Monday.

Stanford (1-2) is scheduled to play at Washington on Saturday and against Oregon State on Dec. 12.

San Jose State sports administra­tors spent Monday canceling basketball games and trying to find a place for the school’s undefeated football team to practice and finish the rest of the Mountain West Conference season.

Athletic director Marie Tuite said administra­tors would have a plan within the coming days for football and basketball in response to the tough new restrictio­ns.

Stanford football

The game against Oregon State was to have been played at Stanford. Now it could become a home game for Oregon State, played in Corvallis, or it could be played at Stanford’s temporary home in the Pacific Northwest.

The Pac-12 also plans to have teams play Dec. 19, though

matchups have not been announced. Stanford is coming off a thrilling win in the Big Game sealed on a blocked point-after kick that would have seen Cal tie the game in the final seconds.

Monday, Santa Clara County executive Jeff Smith reiterated frustratio­ns with sports teams based in the county for making plans to relocate, including the San Francisco 49ers. Smith added that he anticipate­d the three-week ban on contact sports will be extended.

“Historical­ly, sportsmans­hip has been about building a team and protecting that team,” he said. “Coaches, managers and owners used to want to protect their players from harm. Those values seem to have been placed on hold during the COVID pandemic. If leaders want to protect their teams and communitie­s, they should not play anywhere until it is safe. One might envision a reemergenc­e of team-building if the teams spent their time building a COVID relief fund for the community rather than trying to put the community at more risk.”

San Jose State football

The Spartans (4- 0), who were off Monday, have little time to prepare for Hawaii (3-3) this weekend after having the past two games canceled because of COVID-19 issues.

Coach Brent Brennan said Hawaii presents “an incredible challenge while we figure out where we are going to practice, where we are going to play. So there is no shortage of challenges for us to face and overcome.”

Santa Clara County’s new COVID-19 restrictio­ns went into effect at 12:01 a.m. Monday and will last until Dec. 21. The guidelines, announced Saturday, include a three-week ban on all profession­al, collegiate and high school sports, a mandatory quarantine for those traveling into the region from more than 150 miles away and new capacity limits for indoor businesses. On Monday, Gov. Gavin Newsom suggested California­ns could face a more restrictiv­e stay-at-home order in the coming days.

SJSU officials canceled the season opener Wednesday night for the men’s basketball team because playing at Pepperdine in Malibu is beyond the 150-mile travel radius. Tuite said the Spartans would have had to quarantine for 14 days if they made the trip.

The team has three scheduled home games on Dec. 6, Dec. 9 and Dec. 18 that need to be moved or canceled.

The women’s basketball team had five scheduled games set for the next three weeks, including four at home. One has already been called off — today’s game against USF — and more cancellati­ons or relocation­s could come soon.

 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Stanford and wide receiver Michael Wilson, scoring a touchdown in Friday’s 24-23 victory over Cal, are looking for a place to face Oregon State on Dec. 12.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Stanford and wide receiver Michael Wilson, scoring a touchdown in Friday’s 24-23 victory over Cal, are looking for a place to face Oregon State on Dec. 12.

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