Testing is the key to having college football this year. https://www.ajc.com/sports/ncaa-doctor- ... UFeVQsOmO/
Don’t get too excited about one opinion.Furmanoid wrote: ↑Sun May 03, 2020 10:05 amThis article isn’t reassuring. Going by the last few sentences it doesn’t sound like they are even thinking about having fans present. It sounds like they may ignore the fact that the vast majority of teams don’t play in packed 90,000 seat stadiums. Their focus seems to be on testing players-some of the least vulnerable people on the planet. I just wonder if it really makes sense to stress so much about protecting the players for 3 hours on Saturday afternoons when they are at college all week. Do we really think that everybody is going to social distance at college? I’m afraid it will spread enough through normal college stuff that large numbers of players will test positive right off the bat and shut the season down before it starts. I think the real choice is have the rona and play or have it and don’t play. But I think college kids are mostly gonna get it. Unless the transmissibility is less than we’ve been told.
This is a good reason they cannot afford to cancel football. Yes the NCAA basketball tourney is a huge money maker but schools really rely on football to support other sports(especially large schools). The season may be altered by some form or fashion but no way it gets cancelled. If it does the country will be in turmoil. If you think people or upset and protesting now, you ain’t seen nothing yet.The Jackal wrote: ↑Sun May 03, 2020 7:09 amThe NCAA already canceled their basketball tournament, which I can only imagine was a massive financial hit. So, I’d guess they’d be willing to do the same with football.
If people protest and cause violence over no football, then this country is in big trouble. Now, if college basketball is canceled, I am protesting! Priorities people.apaladin wrote: ↑Sun May 03, 2020 11:33 amThis is a good reason they cannot afford to cancel football. Yes the NCAA basketball tourney is a huge money maker but schools really rely on football to support other sports(especially large schools). The season may be altered by some form or fashion but no way it gets cancelled. If it does the country will be in turmoil. If you think people or upset and protesting now, you ain’t seen nothing yet.The Jackal wrote: ↑Sun May 03, 2020 7:09 amThe NCAA already canceled their basketball tournament, which I can only imagine was a massive financial hit. So, I’d guess they’d be willing to do the same with football.
Technically, that was the same criteria for Georgia to being "reopening," but that didn't stop anyone.FUBeAR wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 1:14 amNCAA floated this out on Friday. Seems to be laying the groundwork for how College Football will be played this Fall or not.
http://www.ncaa.org/about/resources/me ... ports-look
http://www.ncaa.org/sport-science-inst ... iate-sport
Numero Uno is the “Gating Criteria” - Number of New REPORTED COVID19 Cases Daily in the state - must be on “downward trajectory for 14 days” ...and a few other metrics...
Anyway - read it & discuss - my initial thought - not looking good my brothers - College Football season (or not) lies (initially) in the hands of those collecting / reporting state-level data, who MAY (read DO, IMO) have financial incentives and/or an agenda for this data to reflect and continue to reflect negative results. That can be debated, of course, but if you can’t see/understand what their incentive/agenda is, you aren’t trying hard enough and/or are refusing to be objective. And, if you don’t think data can be manipulated to tell whatever story you would like it to tell, then you have not been paying attention to FUBeAR’s & Jackal’s internet-wide debates over the past 8 years.
Praying for Health & Safety for ALL; praying for the souls & families/friends of those lost to this #RottenRona, praying for the Healthcare workers & those on the ‘front line’ dealing with this ish; praying for an eventual return to (old) normal; praying for honor/integrity among those collecting/reporting data, and praying we have College Football this Fall!
FU3 wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 11:06 amAlmost every country in the world is in some form of lock down all because of fear
mongering by US media? There is no doubt that there will be people who will attempt to game data for financial incentives. It certainly won’t be unique to those who are putting a “negative”spin on it. In any event the results both medically and financially are going to be catastrophic with no short term easy way out... that is a fact. I pray we have the fortitude like previous generations of Americans who worked together to over come awful times. I miss Furman sports immensely,and as someone who still coaches at the HS level feel horrible for my team and every kid who has had to miss what many of us found to be some of the best times of our lives. I don’t know when sports can or should return but we should rely on some fact based science and not wishful thinking to decide.
I agree. Besides, the media did not lock down the economy. The virus, then science and then the government did that. All the media did was to report the facts as they were happening.FU3 wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 11:06 amAlmost every country in the world is in some form of lock down all because of fear
mongering by US media? There is no doubt that there will be people who will attempt to game data for financial incentives. It certainly won’t be unique to those who are putting a “negative”spin on it. In any event the results both medically and financially are going to be catastrophic with no short term easy way out... that is a fact. I pray we have the fortitude like previous generations of Americans who worked together to over come awful times. I miss Furman sports immensely,and as someone who still coaches at the HS level feel horrible for my team and every kid who has had to miss what many of us found to be some of the best times of our lives. I don’t know when sports can or should return but we should rely on some fact based science and not wishful thinking to decide.