Originally posted by Sec10-A-14
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Will we have football in the fall?
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Schedule reductions have been approved. Max of 10 games, minimum of 7 to make the post season.
https://www.themiaa.com/news/2020/5/...2020-2021.aspx
https://ncaaorg.s3.amazonaws.com/cha...quirements.pdf
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Originally posted by ccmoney8 View Post
These decisions seem to be split along both political lines, and also along the lines of football sponsorship. CSU system shuts down campuses, yet San Diego State plans to proceed with fall sports. CCAA becomes the first to cancel fall sports, yet doesn't sponsor football. SEC/Big 12 are full steam ahead for football, yet UConn has said it's unlikely. Strange tensions at work here.
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Originally posted by Sec10-A-14 View Post
Heard a news blip one biomed company is working on a test strip that is placed on your tongue and in seconds lets you know results.
I'd buy that stock
I can certainly see lots of teams going with cheap and quick tests and giving themselves an early false sense of security until older coaches start getting sick and a better test finds large percentage of team infected. I hope it works, but I have serious doubts that a full schedule will be played for most teams that attempt the season.
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Originally posted by Wildcat Khan View Post
Also looking at the stats for Kittitas County and what Inslee is saying, it could be one of the first to open in the state with both a low infection rate among the population and a low population total and could be good news for CWU. Neighboring Yakima County though is being hit a lot harder.
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Maybe there might be football this fall. Per NCAA
https://www.npr.org/sections/coronav...rusliveupdates<>
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Originally posted by Wildcat94 View Post
I agree. Yakima county has been hit hard but all other counties in Central/Eastern Washington are very minimal. For a revamped schedule if CWU is not able to travel to Michigan (2), California and Texas this year, I could see CWU trying to schedule games with NAIA/FCS schools to the East (Idaho, Montana). Not so sure they would schedule D3 unless the really needed to fill 4-5 open slots.
The news about the SEC will also be interesting and how things go with them opening next month.
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Originally posted by UMary1 View Post
While officials continue to figure out when and how college football players will be able to safely return to campus, everyone is going to have to get accustomed to a new normal. From weight rooms to practice fields to dining halls, things will be different. And, upon arrival, coronavirus testing will be key.
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Originally posted by wssuram View Post
UConn is likely to drop football in my opinion. When conference realignment killed Big East football only a few years after UConn reinstated football, the response from some gave me the impression that the program would be discontinued at some point. The move to the AAC did nothing for their historically powerful men's and women's basketball programs. So their move back to the Big East (now a non-football conference) leaves football as an independent. I think UConn's "unlikely" position on playing football is foreshadowing football not returning to the university.
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Originally posted by cwfenn View Post
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Originally posted by bigmrg74 View PostI could see a lot of universities from the Mid majors taking a hard look at their programs when its all said and done here and we could see some division shifts. I would have to think that some MAC and other programs would be really thinking hard about dropping down to D1-AA football. And that could set up another round of musical chairs.
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