The Morning Call

PIAA chief doesn’t expect spring sports shutdown

- By Chris Harlan

PIAA executive director Bob Lombardi said he doesn’t believe this “pause” of interschol­astic sports will drag on for months like the shutdown last spring.

“I take them for their word that it’s a pause,” Lombardi said Friday, a day after Gov. Tom Wolf’s administra­tion halted practices and contests statewide until Jan. 4 to slow the rising number of coronaviru­s cases.

“It appears to me a lot of it centers around our front-line people in the hospital and our first-responders,” Lombardi said. “They’re getting to the point where they maybe overwhelme­d. If weneed to help them, we need to help them.”

ThePIAAhas­encouraged­itsmembers to follow the governor’s latest COVID-19 mitigation efforts in hopes that winter sports will resume in a few weeks. In March, teams faced a two-week shutdownth­at ultimately stretched well into the summer.

“I don’t see this that way,” Lombardi said. “I would take them for their word. Let’s see what the next few weeks bring. Hopefully, we can work through this.”

Onekey difference is Wolf didn’t order school buildings closed this time.

In the spring, schools were closed statewide March 13 and didn’t reopen for months. The classroom situations are different now, said Lombardi, who shared a recent conversati­on with state Rep. Mike Pfeifer, a Republican who represents a congressio­nal district near Scranton.

“He thought some of the schools have done an outstandin­g job with their health and safety plans and their sanitation and their spacing and their social distancing and their mask wearing,” Lombardi said. “I think that’s all a lot different than it was in the spring.”

A number of schools moved forward Friday night with their season openers, including Notre Dame-Green Pond, Allentown Central Catholic and Executive Education Academy in the Lehigh Valley, since Wolf’s order didn’t take effect until 12:01 a.m. Saturday. Lombardi said the PIAA let individual districts make that decision.

“I get it,” he said. “Everybody’s trying to do their best.”

Teams can resume practice Jan. 4, but PIAA rules won’t let them compete immediatel­y.

First, teams must complete 15 preseason practices before their first games. Teams that completed those 15 workouts before the shutdown will need four additional days of practice following the shutdown under a policy approved Wednesday by the PIAA board.

According to the new policy, PIAA teams whose workouts are shut down for more than seven days need two practices before resuming competitio­n. That requiremen­t increases to three practices for a shutdown longer than 10 days, and four practices for a shutdown longer than 14 days.

So, the earliest a team can compete after the shutdown is Jan. 8.

The PIAA issued a statement Friday urging members to follow the governor’s COVID-19 orders. In part, the PIAAsaid: “Hopefully, this temporary suspension will assist in flattening the curve and reducing the number of cases statewide. We all collective­ly must be diligent in following mitigation efforts in order for a successful return to the season.”

The PIAA board plans to reconvene Jan. 6.

“We’re going to have to have lot of communicat­ion whether it’s telephone, conference calls or work session,” Lombardi said. “Right now, that’s the scheduled meeting, but that maychange.”

Wolf noted Thursday that the Pennsylvan­ia Principals Associatio­n had asked the PIAA to delay the start of winter sports. Instead, the PIAAleft the decision whether to play with individual school districts.

“In anticipati­on of hopefully returning to play in January, PIAA will continue to recognize and review suggestion­s from various education groups represente­d on the Board of Directors,” the PIAA said in its statement. “The Board has been proactive in the implementa­tion of policies throughout the fall and winter sports’ seasons. At Wednesday’s meeting, the Board removed many eligibilit­y restrictio­ns and deadlines to allow for maximum flexibilit­y and opportunit­ies for schools to complete a winter season.”

Among its board actions Wednesday, the PIAA eliminated the regular-season deadline. Now, teams not actively involved in the PIAA postseason can play regular-season contests up until the date of the state championsh­ips, March 27. ThePIAAgav­eteams the same option in the fall.

The PIAA will limit its team tournament­s to champions only, reducing the number of state qualifiers. With smaller tournament­s, the PIAA start date for its postseason competitio­n will be later, giving districts additional time to complete the regular season and district playoffs.

“We were proactive,” Lombardi said. “Andbymakin­g those moves, wefeel the way this looks right now we have some wiggle room to adjust. The board did a tremendous job getting ahead of it.”

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