USA TODAY US Edition

COVID lingers over ’21 football season

- Dan Wolken

At some point late Monday night just outside of Miami, confetti guns were set to go off and a trophy was to be handed to either Alabama or Ohio State and the entire college football industry will collective­ly exhale.

For 10 straight months, administra­tors at every school and conference in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n have worked through innumerabl­e problems and uncertaint­ies to get to the conclusion of a 2020 season that, at various points, nobody was sure would happen. But as soon as this season ends, college football officials will have to turn their sights to a new piece of the COVID-19 puzzle: What is the 2021 season going to look like?

“We know we’re still in the middle of trying to work through a pandemic,” Oklahoma athletic director Joe Castiglion­e said. “The football season may be over, but the pandemic isn’t.”

Beyond the existentia­l challenges college sports will have to navigate in 2021 brought on by the name, image and likeness legislatio­n moving through the NCAA and Congress and liberalize­d transfer rules for athletes, the next several months for college football will be consumed by more elemental issues including how long it will be necessary to continue strict COVID-19 protocols, the feasibilit­y of spring practice, vaccinatin­g players and whether the fall of 2021 will truly be a return to normal.

“I’m an eternal optimist so we’re about to roll out our new season ticket structure and we’re preparing to have as normal of a fall as we can,” said Boston College athletics director Pat Kraft. “That’s the only thing you can do. You hope the vaccine (is widely available) and everything is better. But we know this isn’t over.”

That means as football players whose seasons ended trickle back to campuses in the coming weeks for offseason conditioni­ng, they will return to a similar environmen­t they’ve been operating in for the last several months: Lots of testing, mask wearing and social distancing, plus quarantini­ng for players who get contact traced to a positive test. The question nobody can really answer is whether that will last well into the spring, continue through the summer or perhaps carry into the fall season.

“We have at least as difficult a six months ahead as what we just experience­d,” Tulane athletic director Troy Dannen said. “When we talked about playing our bowl game, part of the thought of having two more weeks of practice is that all bets are off right now as far as what spring football looks like. It will be three tests a week and shutting down groups, shutting down teams (for contact tracing). It’s going to look like the fall without games.”

And as pretty much every college coach has said either publicly or probably privately, nobody wants to go through that again.

College football could be in limbo

It leaves college football in an odd

state of limbo, where July and August of 2021 seem far enough away that you can envision a large degree of normalcy. At the same time, the January reality is that the spread of the virus is at its worst point of the entire pandemic, administra­tors are bracing for the heavy lift of getting college basketball to the finish line and the vaccine rollout has been so slow in the initial stages that it would be foolish to project where college students would fall in the pecking order.

“We don’t have any specific knowledge at the moment when we would have a vaccine available,” Castiglion­e said. “I remember going back to the summer, people were saying with some certainty that the testing would be widely available and it wasn’t. So we’re being very diligent and patient and cautious to take any further step until we know for sure.”

Even then, the entire vaccine issue is a delicate one for schools, some of which are already in the process of surveying athletes about whether they’d be willing to take it and developing plans on how to present the option.

According to several public opinion surveys, Black Americans and younger people are more skeptical than other groups of the COVID-19 vaccine with a recent Pew survey showing just 42% of Black adults and 55% of 18- to 29-yearolds saying they would definitely or probably take the vaccine if it were available today.

Anecdotall­y, college coaches and administra­tors have experience with encouragin­g athletes to take flu shots every year, often with frustratin­g results.

“I would say it’s 50-50 on the flu shot,” Liberty coach Hugh Freeze said. “Some of these kids don’t want needles period, and everybody’s not going to take it I don’t think. What do you do with that as opposed to the ones who took the vaccines? Do we keep paying for tests? There’s still a lot of questions.”

The general expectatio­n is that college students would not be at the front of the line for the vaccine, though Wash

ington State athletic director Pat Chun is hoping for more clarity this month once President-elect Joe Biden is inaugurate­d and the new Department of Education leadership weighs in.

But even assuming college football players could start getting those shots in the summer, there will have to be a set of protocols developed for players who choose not to take them. How often will they have to be tested? Would they be subject to contact tracing and quarantine­s if they were exposed to COVID-19?

In effect, it’s impossible to separate the national vaccine administra­tion program – and how many players eventually take it – from the day-to-day operation of football in 2021.

“We’ll go through a process when the time is appropriat­e to educate them on the benefits or the risks in taking the vaccine, but if there’s anything we’ve learned from 2020 is we have to respect people’s opinion,” Chun said. “My assumption is if they choose not to, they’ll have to stay in some type of testing protocol.”

Fear of lost revenue still looms

College football will also have to be prepared for the possibilit­y that certain local restrictio­ns will remain in place for several more months, potentiall­y stretching into the fall. New Mexico State, an FBS independen­t, decided it could not play this fall but has three basketball games scheduled against Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n teams for late February and early March. But they are still limited to five people at a time for non-contact practice, which is why the school sent its men’s and women’s basketball teams to camp in Phoenix for the season.

Losing out on scheduled non-conference games with Florida and UCLA in 2020 cost the New Mexico State athletic department $2.75 million, which accounts for 85% of the budget deficit the athletic department will face as a result of the pandemic, according to athletic director Mario Moccia. As a result, it’s “absolutely critical” to be in a position next fall to play scheduled money games at Alabama and Kentucky.

“We have to play those games,” Moccia said. “We can’t go two years in a row without those guarantee games. We schedule those as a matter of our fiscal survival.”

On a different scale, programs at the Power Five and Group of Five levels are cautiously optimistic about having more fans in the stadium but recognize that there are several variables that could determine how many. After a year of limited attendance, or in many places no fans, administra­tors will be desperate to return to pre-pandemic ticket revenue levels.

Because there’s an expectatio­n that COVID-19 will still be around next fall, administra­tors are hoping that the FBS conference­s – and particular­ly the Power Five – do a better job this offseason of getting on the same page to deal with protocols. That could be especially relevant as schools prepare to play nonconfere­nce games in 2021 between leagues that had different approaches this past season to testing and contact tracing.

2021 ‘isn’t going back to normal’

For everyone who played, coached or worked in college football this fall, the notion that Monday night was the finish line for the season but not for COVID-19 is going to be difficult to reckon with.

Part of the reason everyone was willing to sacrifice their social life and constantly get swabs stuck up their noses was the goal of playing football games. The next games are a long way off, but the inconvenie­nces of COVID-19 life aren’t going anywhere.

“The players – while they understood and were really good about taking the steps so they could do what they asked to do, which was have a safe path to playing – it’s fair to say they had some fatigue with everything,” Castiglion­e said. “My guess is there will continue to be some protocols in place. I think people will still be required to wear masks for the foreseeabl­e future, and if somebody is just tired of it, well, sorry. It’s something you’re going to have to continue to do and to embrace as we find a way to expand the opportunit­y to have a season safely.”

At some point, college football will be in a position where nobody has to worry about whether a game will contribute to spreading a dangerous virus. But nobody’s going to take for granted that the path to get there is suddenly easy just because the 2020 season was completed.

In the days ahead, the focus will turn to what needs to happen to make things work in 2021.

And even though it seems far away, there isn’t a lot of time to waste.

“When players come back, all the protocols go back – testing, everything,” Kraft said. “Getting to the end of the year isn’t going back to normal but hopefully through the summer and into September we’re in a place where we were where we open the building and play.

“We’re in a part of the country where everyone is taking it seriously, but I think we’ll get there by kickoff of next year. I hope so. We need it.”

 ?? BRUCE NEWMAN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Alabama’s Nick Saban was one of several coaches who tested positive for the coronaviru­s this season.
BRUCE NEWMAN/USA TODAY SPORTS Alabama’s Nick Saban was one of several coaches who tested positive for the coronaviru­s this season.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States