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Post by Dave Maynar on Aug 9, 2020 18:54:42 GMT -5
It's super weird reading about this because it appears the MAC canceling is what changed the course of events because nobody wanted to be first. Never thought the MAC would be in the driver's seat on anything.
Nebraska and Iowa reportedly voted to keep the season, so they'd be the first ones I'd think might sign up from the Big Ten. I do wonder if anything like that would happen though since there would be a certain amount of money negotiations that would have to happen.
Post by Dave Maynar on Aug 11, 2020 14:12:13 GMT -5
Reports coming in (again) that the Big Ten is cancelling the fall 2020 season and will attempt to have something in the spring. After this weekend, a significant part of me is waiting on official word.
Reports coming in (again) that the Big Ten is cancelling the fall 2020 season and will attempt to have something in the spring. After this weekend, a significant part of me is waiting on official word.
Reports coming in (again) that the Big Ten is cancelling the fall 2020 season and will attempt to have something in the spring. After this weekend, a significant part of me is waiting on official word.
the least bad decision IMO
It's not going to be any better in the spring. Plus what do you do after that? Are you going to ask these kids to play a spring season then turn right around and do the regular fall season next year?
It's not going to be any better in the spring. Plus what do you do after that? Are you going to ask these kids to play a spring season then turn right around and do the regular fall season next year?
It might not be any better in the spring, but maybe there will be a vaccine. Spring or no spring, the question of "what happens if a player dies" is what has to keep Presidents and ADs up at night.
It's not going to be any better in the spring. Plus what do you do after that? Are you going to ask these kids to play a spring season then turn right around and do the regular fall season next year?
It might not be any better in the spring, but maybe there will be a vaccine. Spring or no spring, the question of "what happens if a player dies" is what has to keep Presidents and ADs up at night.
If they go with spring ball, I would think it'd be a short season like 4 games or something like that. More than a season, it'd end up being a series of tune up games like spring games but between different schools.
It might not be any better in the spring, but maybe there will be a vaccine. Spring or no spring, the question of "what happens if a player dies" is what has to keep Presidents and ADs up at night.
If they go with spring ball, I would think it'd be a short season like 4 games or something like that. More than a season, it'd end up being a series of tune up games like spring games but between different schools.
What if the SEC and ACC go on as normal? The other conferences will never catch up from that.
If they go with spring ball, I would think it'd be a short season like 4 games or something like that. More than a season, it'd end up being a series of tune up games like spring games but between different schools.
What if the SEC and ACC go on as normal? The other conferences will never catch up from that.
I mean they can try, but I'd imagine the chance of them playing out anything more than a few weeks is slim to none.
If they go with spring ball, I would think it'd be a short season like 4 games or something like that. More than a season, it'd end up being a series of tune up games like spring games but between different schools.
What if the SEC and ACC go on as normal? The other conferences will never catch up from that.
I really doubt any of these seasons play out like they're planning it to. If you read Sankey's comments, I get the SEC is just letting things play out longer rather so they can say they tried.
Not sure what you mean about catching up though. Big Ten and PAC12 will lose recruits for sure, but there's only so many roster spots available. As much as coaches want to poach, they also have to look at the optics if they dump 15 recruits in mid August.
If they go with spring ball, I would think it'd be a short season like 4 games or something like that. More than a season, it'd end up being a series of tune up games like spring games but between different schools.
What if the SEC and ACC go on as normal? The other conferences will never catch up from that.
If the SEC and ACC go on as usual, perhaps the other conferences will take a significant hit on recruiting for the next couple of years. But if Duke, UVA, UNC, Vanderbilt, and Boston College all play football this year, they will catch considerable academic blowback.