UConn plays football? When did that start?
When they beat us in 2009 with a Notre Dame QB transfer
UConn plays football? When did that start?
They're all at risk ya dumb ass. You kids make me giggle. You all think you're incapable of being affected by anything. My own son included. Bunch of dumb asses. Take this seriously. You have no idea what the long term affects will be....myself either, but why play with it? Take the precautions. Quit following that orange jackass sending crap through the media.
When they beat us in 2009 with a Notre Dame QB transfer
I hear ya, but when I start to think that, you read something like the article below. Or, you read about the imprint the virus leaves on the heart. The cardiovascular damage is obviously something still being studied, but is scary none the less. While death of young people is rare, I am not personally convinced that it is as risk free (or risk reduced) as others seem to convey. It's just seems like they are gambling with the health of young people just to get a payday.
https://www.indystar.com/story/spor...s-mother-posts-covid-19-diagnosis/5577215002/
Yes and no. Risk isn't limited to just health though. There is some serious liability concerns for schools. For example, would the schools be held financially culpable if a coach or player was unfortunate enough to have an unexpected long term side effect of COVID? What happens in the off chance something happens similar to the Marlins where one school outbreak forces one or two others to miss some games? Are they held financially responsible? Not to mention if something like what is alleged at Colorado State actually happens. There are endless types of risk.
The Pac12 has already secured a credit line for the league where schools could get a substantial cash infusion and pay it back over the next 10 years. So they are alternatives to help schools survive if they don't get to play this season.
Honestly though, I hope this makes everyone rethink the money in this sport. It's one part where the Pac12 players demand make perfect sense to me.
This bed was made by being fiscally irresponsible over the last two decades. I just hope that no matter what happens, they learn their lesson here and think about what will happen when they need to start actually paying the players.
https://theundefeated.com/features/pac-12-followed-the-money-and-found-a-movement/
Pay them and I'm fine with the risk. Don't pay them and make them play, well, that's a problem for me.https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2018/aug/19/college-football-deaths-offseason-workouts
Will more than 2 die per year? I doubt it. Will more be permanently disabled? Worse than CTE? NFWIH
Risk is a fact of life - at least any life worth living. Give people the option and get on with it all. Those that opt out will open opportunity for those who play. So bass ackwards to remove opportunity from others b/c some are afraid.
These kids are already putting their body at risk WAY more dramatically than the virus impact.
Yes, and if you are at fault, you are held liable. That's exactly my point. The difference is, there are known and calculated odds surrounding driving. There is established legal grounds. Covid? Not so much. The legal ambiguity is a serious concern.Tens of thousands die in car accidents every year in the US. We don't eliminate cars. We try to manage risk.
The PAC 12 players' "demands" were all within reason until they asked for 50%. That's an absolute joke.
For the players:
Sit out the season and pay your own way through school for the year
Play the season and the university picks up the dime.
No one should be paid to not work. Thats the whole problem America is facing today. Entitled people who get a check to do nothing.

But one is professional, the other isn't. I thinks that the problem with the bubble. If the school existed for the primary purpose of football, the bubble concept is sufficient. But football isn't why these schools exist.The Premier Lacrosse League is on the verge of completing their season. Played it in a "bubble" with NBC broadcasts and it was a resounding success. The "bubble" has proven to work.
There is no reason the season can't go on as planned unless some universities/students continue to fuck up. This includes socializing and the kind of stuff we saw at Louisville that got 3 players booted.
Fans should be allowed, IMO, up to a certain capacity. They should be kept away from players and team personnel. Travel should only involve chartered planes/buses.
You can manage risk to players/staff down to near ~0 with proper steps. Many sports leagues have proven this at this point. Just need people to stop fucking around and the games can get played this fall... but if that doesn't happen, I think the only real option is to move everything 100% to the spring.
Tens of thousands die in car accidents every year in the US. We don't eliminate cars. We try to manage risk.
The PAC 12 players' "demands" were all within reason until they asked for 50%. That's an absolute joke.
But one is professional, the other isn't. I thinks that the problem with the bubble. If the school existed for the primary purpose of football, the bubble concept is sufficient. But football isn't why these schools exist.
But one is professional, the other isn't. I thinks that the problem with the bubble. If the school existed for the primary purpose of football, the bubble concept is sufficient. But football isn't why these schools exist.
No one should be paid to not work. Thats the whole problem America is facing today.
Entitled people who get a check to do nothing.
Does that include executive "parachute" payments, book royalties and movie residuals?
Cuz, ouch, that would mess up the scenario.
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10x that for ND. On-campus community experience is the primary purpose. (And it is wonderful). A "bubble" has no more chance than a football dorm.
Maybe if more were done away with, then the SCal liberal movie star would be more hesitant to voice his/her opinion on every single thing
Hmm... a lot of conservatives get book royalties,TV residuals, ad revenue despite doing nothing after their book is published or podcast/show is done.
Should we make them more hesitant to voice their opinions, too?
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Edit: Sorry guys, fell in the rabbithole again. Will do better.....
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How about if the dont post their opinions unless they are in some exceptional case, an authority on the subject based on education and career experience?
Let me add that for high school sports, which are truly amateur, in most places across the country they're pushing fall sports out to a shortened "spring" season. They're doing this because they expect a vaccine to be available and risk to be mitigated by Q1 of next year.
As it stands, there is no way to play contact sports without unacceptable risk of spreading infection... unless you have the resources for widespread, rapid, and repeated testing of all participants AND the ability to limit interactions between the participants and the un-controlled population at large. That is a total impossibility in amateur sports... but very plausible in professional sports. It sort of begs the questions of which you consider NCAA football to be.
How about if the dont post their opinions unless they are in some exceptional case, an authority on the subject based on education and career experience?
We insist on integrating athletes into the general student population due to our philosophy of education. That's a good thing which won't be changing any time soon. But most of ND's stakeholders would rather compromise on that ideal for a limited time rather than cancel an entire season.
On one hand, college sports is already professional. It's professional for everyone but the players who don't have contracts*.
So you have players opt in or opt out. If they opt in, it's reasonable to ask them to be in a "bubble" for the season. If they opt out, that's fine, they act as a general student and are kept away from the rest of the team.
The number one way this goes sideways is having players socializing (bars, parties, etc.) and causing outbreaks. So I think you either need to find a way to "bubble" or you need to postpone the season. I think half measures are ultimately doomed to fail.
*They implicitly do, they have scholarship agreements. But that's a whole 'nother topic.
We insist on integrating athletes into the general student population due to our philosophy of education. That's a good thing which won't be changing any time soon. But most of ND's stakeholders would rather compromise on that ideal for a limited time rather than cancel an entire season.