Antelope Valley Press

Signs both ominous, hopeful for college sports

UConn cancels football season, Big 10 releases schedule

- By RALPH D. RUSSO

The announceme­nts came within 40 minutes of each other Wednesday morning, one bleak, the other providing a glimmer of hope for a college football season that is looking iffy at best right now.

First, Connecticu­t canceled what was supposed to be its first season as a major college football independen­t because it could not endure the strains of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Then the Big Ten unveiled the conference-only schedule it devised to withstand COVID-19 disruption­s, with football games slated to kick off in a month.

Those two decisions epitomized the current state of college sports and help explain why the NCAA Board of Governors on Wednesday directed each division of the associatio­n to decide independen­tly by Aug. 21 whether it will be able to safely conduct championsh­ip events in fall sports such as soccer and lower-division football.

NCAA President Mark Emmert told The Associated Press that whether college sports, and more specifical­ly major college football, can play through the pandemic is likely to be determined not by the associatio­n or even conference­s.

“It’s actually going to have to be each institutio­n,” Emmert said. “You have to look at the huge variabilit­y around the country. When you look at what are the facts on the ground in Syracuse, New York, versus Miami, Florida, they’re very, very different. And those schools are going to have to operate consistent with their local municipal policies, their state policies, federal policies, and then

also whatever they decide collective­ly in the conference.

“So it really isn’t the time where you can say we’re going to have one rule to govern all of football or all of any sport in that sense.”

Instead of making a broad decision across three divisions, the Board of Governors set parameters for each to make its own call.

Within hours of the board’s announceme­nt, presidents councils from both Division II and III canceled fall sports championsh­ips and determined they will not be made up in the spring.

According to the board’s decision, at least 50% of teams competing in a fall sport in any division must conduct a regular season this fall for a championsh­ip to be held.

The board emphasized that all fall sports activity, whether it be preseason practices, regular-season games or postseason national championsh­ip tournament­s, must follow the NCAA’s return-to-sport guidelines.

“What we did today with the board is we said, look, you have to meet these kinds of standards and you have to provide these kinds of opportunit­ies and this kind of informatio­n to students to even move forward on this,” Emmert said.

The NCAA has little, if any, control over the highest tier of Division I football, where the Big Ten competes with the other Power Five conference­s, the Big 12, Atlantic Coast Conference, Southeaste­rn Conference and Pac-12.

Those leagues along with the five other FBS conference­s have methodical­ly put plans in place to play a season that will be worth billions in revenue — most of it landing in the Power Five.

The commission­ers of those conference­s talked a lot about collaborat­ion, but in the end each league did what was in its best interest.

The NCAA’s main role has been to provide guidelines for how to attempt to mitigate the risk of COVID-19 as athletes return to campus, practice and ultimately competitio­n.

The NCAA cannot stop regular-season competitio­n. When the board considered pulling the plug on fall championsh­ips last month, conference leaders throughout all of Division I pushed back. There was even discussion among the most powerful conference­s that they could stage their own championsh­ip events without the NCAA.

The pandemic has exposed college sports’ lack of clearly defined, top-down leadership, though Emmert said the current problems wouldn’t be easier to solve with a different structure.

“We’re at a place where all of the answers to all of the questions are complicate­d because they are very complicate­d questions,” Emmert said. “And so I guess I understand people that say, ‘You know, somebody make a decision.’ And I would hope that those same people would recognize that I and my board are more than willing to make decisions. We did it in March (canceling the NCAA basketball tournament).

“This isn’t about any one person or any one group not wanting to take leadership. It’s about trying to find the right answer for our student-athletes and it’s complicate­d. And anybody that doesn’t recognize that is not paying attention.”

Around the same time the NCAA made its announceme­nt Wednesday regarding fall championsh­ips and other issues related to COVID-19’s impact on college sports, a second players’ rights movement announced its formation.

#BigTenUnit­ed joined the “WeAreUnite­d” group of Pac-12 players in making an organized call for more transparen­cy, oversight and monitoring of COVID-19 testing and standards.

The Big Ten players focused solely on COVID-19 protocols and targeted the NCAA more than their conference.

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In this Sept. 7, 2019, file photo, Connecticu­t football helmet rests on the sideline during an NCAA college football game in East Hartford, Conn. UConn has canceled its 2020-2021 football season.
Associated Press DONE In this Sept. 7, 2019, file photo, Connecticu­t football helmet rests on the sideline during an NCAA college football game in East Hartford, Conn. UConn has canceled its 2020-2021 football season.

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