Lol but instead we are going to vote to play the night that LSU’s coach admits most of his team had Covid
Id like for someone to take a deeper look at the covid spread around these college towns b/c the rallying cry is "See, achieving Herd Immunity came at no cost. No one died."
Yesterday, Ohio passed retroactive legislation providing immunity for Covid bodily injury claims. It’s Ohio House Bill 606 and DeWine signed it. It’s retroactive to March 6, 2020. It provides immunity from civil lawsuits against businesses, schools, and health care providers. The only suits allowed are reckless or intentional conduct. There are about a dozen states which have passed similar laws.
i'd argue that the Big 10 handled it just fine it's the sports media that is to blame with running shit based off of fans/parents
Maybe they realized it was an exaggerated claim, and not applicable outside of rare exceptions, which is the case with other virus’.
I'm convinced this was all a long ploy by the B1G to avoid playing any Sun Belt teams like App State OOC.
Lol... no he didn’t. He proved he’s a nerd that knows campus stats due to his lame job and he made absolutely no point relevant to this thread in the process. I change my throwaway statement from most of the students have already moved back to Clemson to off campus students have been back. That’s it.
WVU had 2 positive tests last week...both walk-ons and another true freshman was held out due to contact tracing
Classes started Aug 31 so this we're pretty much on schedule with the normal and expected covid timeline.
They're bubbling for the last three rounds. They're just doing it at different sites (for reasons I don't really understand). The only round of the playoffs where they won't be in a bubble is the first round (best of 3) that only exists because of the expanded playoffs. And, even with that, the players are going to be living out of hotels even in their home cities. The entire plan seems way more complicated than necessary, but the travel parties for MLB are also much bigger than they are for NBA teams so there was going to have to be some differences.
They want to allow the top seeds to have the comfort of playing at home, as an advantage, given the randomness of a 3 game series.
It's gonna be fascinating to see the end of year playoff argument if one team plays 8 games and the other candidates play 12.
True but, in a normal year the SEC plays cupcakes as well and not a conference schedule of 10 games + conf. championship. It's a pretty big differential compared to previous close votes in a normal year. Spoiler: SEC schedule
Lol, Anison recited campus move in numbers. Whoa he got me good! Totally changes the landscape of college football and COVID! ...for peasants.