GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Again, waiting for a vaccine to be the end-all-be-all is a fool's pursuit. As previously stated, we had, on average, 60k deaths per year from the flu; less than half of the US gets flu vaccine shots annually. If we choose to wait not only until a vaccine is created but also for the mass population to choose to get one, we will all be dead and buried by the time that ever comes around.
The outlook of having sports, in some form, by the end of summer, is very promising - which should create significant optimism for college basketball season, again in some form, this winter. The present data is remarkably promising, especially for young people (the numbers for people under the age of 25 still is remarkably low). An overwhelming majority of the deaths from the virus are from individuals 55 years and older, and an overwhelming majority of those deaths are cases that had already had serious and life-threatening health issues. Does this derail or minimize the magnitude and/or significance of the virus? Absolutely not, but it does provide meaningful and hopeful perspective.
I predict MLB starts in July, in their respective cities, without fans to start. After a few weeks, perhaps into August, they will allow limited fans with social distancing guidelines. I would not be surprised to see the NBA conduct their playoffs only in a similar manner in late-June/early July, with July being more likely. NCAA Football and NFL will likely be start a little later; OOC games are likely to be scrapped, and the NFL probably will delay the start of training camps/preseason, which will eliminate either preseason games and/or early NFL games. The SEC has already said that it will, independently, look to host games in the Fall - with or without universal participation from conference membership. Many states (particularly in the South) will choose to make a full effort to get things going. In a month, after data is revealed about after the reopening of many Southern states, it will be incredibly telling.
The reality is that over 30 million people are now unemployed. Continuing with a general, wide-ranging, stay-at-home directives only adds to those figures, and - in this case - the professional athletes as well (no TV money to pay out significant salaries to players). Sports networks (ESPN) will not be able to continue charging fees without live content to offer. A nationally targeted quarantine (age/health) is much more likely long-term than a blanket universal one, and, as we can see, states are already pushing back the legality and ethical components for such a shut down. There will be a trickle-down effect once professional leagues/college programs commit to starting back up again. The biggest question is who that will be.
MUPanther wrote:Too much money on the line. We'll get going in fall. I think we will regreat canceling so much summer actives in April, without knowing the landscape.
Uncertain that campuses will reopen, students are reluctant to commit for the fall. For schools, enrollment drops and lost revenue could be devastating.
As they absorb signs of declining enrollment, colleges are preparing for more revenue losses and spending cuts. Like many schools, the University of California, San Diego has already paused three construction projects and imposed a partial hiring freeze. “We’ve promised no layoffs until June 30,” said the chancellor. But the real impact of the virus could be felt at the end of September, when the university’s fall term begins and students must put down tuition money, rather than just deposits. “That’s when the rubber will meet the road,” he said.
College students, kicked off campus by the coronavirus, have a new extracurricular activity: litigation. U.S. undergraduates have sued more than 50 schools, demanding partial tuition, room-and-board and fee refunds after they shut down.
The proliferating breach-of-contract suits, many of them filed over the last week, target some of the biggest names in higher education: state systems including the University of California and Arizona State, as well as private institutions such as Columbia, Cornell and New York University.
The students’ lawyers, advertising on sites such as Collegerefund2020.com, are seeking class-action status on behalf of hundreds of thousands of students. While legal experts say the suits face high hurdles, they could potentially involve billions of dollars in claims.
Multiple conference commissioners told Stadium that student-athletes would not be prevented from returning to campus to play football this season if classes are limited to online-only instruction.
This is a dramatic shift from just a few weeks ago, when many college administrators indicated the general student body would need to return to on-campus classes in order for student-athletes to participate in college football. Those decisions – whether to play if the campus is closed to general students but open to student-athletes – ultimately will be made by the individual school presidents or chancellors.
“Going to class in an online sense is satisfactory,” Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowlsby said. “There’s room for that to happen. School has to be in session, student-athletes have to be going to class.”
ArmyVet wrote:How can a college administrator support having athletes competing if students aren't on campus?Multiple conference commissioners told Stadium that student-athletes would not be prevented from returning to campus to play football this season if classes are limited to online-only instruction.
This is a dramatic shift from just a few weeks ago, when many college administrators indicated the general student body would need to return to on-campus classes in order for student-athletes to participate in college football. Those decisions – whether to play if the campus is closed to general students but open to student-athletes – ultimately will be made by the individual school presidents or chancellors.
“Going to class in an online sense is satisfactory,” Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowlsby said. “There’s room for that to happen. School has to be in session, student-athletes have to be going to class.”
https://watchstadium.com/will-college-f ... 5-07-2020/
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