USA TODAY US Edition

Sankey rings alarm on COVID

- Dan Wolken Columnist USA TODAY

Southeaste­rn Conference Commission­er Greg Sankey is college football’s most discipline­d, careful messenger, a man who has conditione­d himself to reduce every thought in his head to its most bland, non-controvers­ial form for public consumptio­n. His answers to most questions are meant to be as satisfying as 50-calorie beer.

So when Sankey suggests the college football season is in some real trouble, as he did Wednesday during a media conference call, it’s probably wise to pay attention.

“I have to acknowledg­e (we’re) troubled by what’s happened this week,” Sankey said. “There’s still an opportunit­y to focus on (Dec.) 19th, but we have to adjust further within our programs to maintain the health that we did such a great job of early on.”

The reference to Dec. 19 is the date of the SEC championsh­ip game in Atlanta, which seemed on track to happen as scheduled until the Week from COVID-19 Hell.

But just over the last several days, four games that were supposed to be played this Saturday had to be postponed due to positives tests and contact tracing issues at Missouri, Texas A&M, Auburn, Mississipp­i State and LSU. One more game, Vanderbilt at Kentucky, has been in doubt but seemingly will be played pending further tests. Meanwhile, Arkansas will play at Florida this week without head coach Sam Pittman, who tested positive on Monday.

“In normal times our experience this week would be nothing short of extraordin­ary,” Sankey said. “This year, with nothing being ordinary, this is a week unlike any other. I’ve repeatedly said the circumstan­ces around the virus will guide our decisions. The reality is the virus, in some circumstan­ces, determines our direction.”

Suddenly, that direction isn’t necessaril­y pointing toward a positive conclusion.

There’s no clear answer why the SEC, which has been testing players and coaches three times a week for quite a while now, has suddenly become the center of the COVID universe in college sports.

Multiple factors likely had a hand in it, tracking right alongside the spike in cases nationally. One popular theory swirling in college sports circles is that some players let down their guard over Halloween weekend and that the cases have subsequent­ly been incubating in their football facilities over the last 10 days.

A few SEC teams that had recent bye weeks also allowed players to go home for a few days, which might have exposed them via friends and relatives who aren’t in their quasi-bubble on campus.

Alabama coach Nick Saban said he had serious reservatio­ns about letting players go home but didn’t have the stomach to tell them they couldn’t.

“Everyone trusts their family,” Saban said. “I trust my family. But no one knows where Uncle Tommy has been. You have to be careful.”

In a way, perhaps it’s a minor miracle the SEC and much of college football has even gotten this far. For all the public confidence administra­tors were projecting in May, June and July about being able to pull off a season, many of them would privately acknowledg­e that it was going to be a logistical mess and might not get off the ground at all.

That’s not just about the number of positive tests, which has been a major issue at some schools, but also the cascading impact of contact tracing requiremen­ts being managed by local health department­s, which can sideline multiple players who may or may not get sick.

Plus, when the SEC establishe­d that teams needed to have 53 scholarshi­p players available to play including one quarterbac­k, seven offensive linemen and four defensive linemen, those numbers don’t just take COVID-19 into account. Between opt-outs, suspension­s and injuries, it doesn’t take much of an outbreak to drop a team below the line.

The urgency of Sankey’s words related to this week’s events was notable because that’s not the kind of language he typically uses. He even admitted at one point he would have only felt comfortabl­e about reaching the finish line if the SEC could get through Thanksgivi­ng without a major mess. “Obviously that’s changed,” he said. The SEC might not be able to get all of this week’s postponed games in – there’s no obvious landing spot for Alabama-LSU, for instance – but most of the league has already played six games. After this weekend, there are four Saturdays left until Dec. 19. It’s doable, but there’s not much runway left.

And, of course, with the coronaviru­s still in charge, there’s no guarantee we won’t be doing this again next week and the week after that.

The reality for college football as we get into mid-November is the No. 1 (Alabama), No. 3 (Ohio State) and No. 6 (Texas A&M) teams in the Amway Coaches Poll have had games canceled or postponed this weekend and the No. 4 team (Clemson) didn’t have its starting quarterbac­k the last two weeks due to a COVID-19 infection.

We don’t remotely have control of this situation as a country, and we certainly don’t in college football.

The fact someone as cautious as Sankey acknowledg­ed how fragile the next month or so could be is a flashing red siren for the sport.

The finish line of the season may not be that many weeks away, but getting there is going to be a white-knuckle ride.

 ?? BUTCH DILL/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? SEC Commission­er Greg Sankey is “troubled” by the COVID-19 impact on college football, particular­ly his league.
BUTCH DILL/USA TODAY SPORTS SEC Commission­er Greg Sankey is “troubled” by the COVID-19 impact on college football, particular­ly his league.
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