An open letter from Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren on why the fall sports season was cancelled

An open letter to the Big Ten community

With over a week gone by since the Big Ten made the extremely difficult and scrutinized decision to cancel the fall college sports season, Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren penned a letter to the public in order to hopefully clear up reasons behind the cancellation.

As had been previously stated by the conference, nearly all of the reasons listed in the letter are related to the health and safety of the athletes who would be living on a college campus in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. According to Warren, “financial decisions did not influence the COP/C decision, as the postponement will have enormous adverse financial implications.”

Here is the complete letter from Commissioner Warren:

I write on this occasion to share with you additional information regarding the Big Ten Conference’s decision to postpone the 2020-21 fall sports season. We thoroughly understand and deeply value what sports mean to our student-athletes, their families, our coaches and our fans. The vote by the Big Ten Council of Presidents and Chancellors (COP/C) was overwhelmingly in support of postponing fall sports and will not be revisited. The decision was thorough and deliberative, and based on sound feedback, guidance and advice from medical experts. Despite the decision to postpone fall sports, we continue our work to find a path forward that creates a healthy and safe environment for all Big Ten student-athletes to compete in the sports they love in a manner that helps to prevent the spread of COVID-19 and protects both student-athletes and the surrounding communities.

As you are well aware, we are facing a complicated global pandemic with the SARS-CoV-2 virus discovered in November 2019. The first medically confirmed cases did not appear in the United States until January 2020. Over the course of the past seven months, the U.S. has recorded more than 5.5 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 resulting in more than 170,000 deaths, with more than 22 million confirmed cases and 780,000 lives lost around the world.

We understand the disappointment and questions surrounding the timing of our decision to postpone fall sports, especially in light of releasing a football schedule only six days prior to that decision. From the beginning, we consistently communicated our commitment to cautiously proceed one day at a time with the health, safety and wellness of our student-athletes at the center of our decision-making process. That is why we took simultaneous paths in releasing the football schedule, while also diligently monitoring the spread of the virus, testing, and medical concerns as student-athletes were transitioning to full-contact practice.

While several factors contributed to the decision to postpone the 2020-21 fall sports season, at the core of our decision was the knowledge that there was too much medical uncertainty and too many unknown health risks regarding SARS-CoV-2 infection and its impact on our student-athletes.

Listed below are the primary factors that led to the Big Ten COP/C decision:

  • Transmission rates continue to rise at an alarming rate with little indication from medical experts that our campuses, communities or country could gain control of the spread of the virus prior to the start of competition.
    • As our teams were ramping up for more intense practices, many of our medical staffs did not think the interventions we had planned would be adequate to decrease the potential spread even with very regular testing.
    • As the general student body comes back to campus, spread to student-athletes could reintroduce infection into our athletics community.
  • There is simply too much we do not know about the virus, recovery from infection, and longer-term effects. While the data on cardiomyopathy is preliminary and incomplete, the uncertain risk was unacceptable at this time.
  • Concerns surrounding contact tracing still exist, including the inability to social distance in contact sports pursuant to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines. While risk mitigation processes (e.g., physical distancing, face coverings, proper hygiene, etc.) can be implemented across campus for the student body population, it became clear those processes could not be fully implemented in contact sports.
    • With the start of full-contact practices and competitions, it became increasingly clear that contact tracing and quarantining would risk frequent and significant disruptions to the practice and competition calendar.
    • Accurate and widely available rapid testing may help mitigate those concerns, but access to accurate tests is currently limited.
    • Significant concerns also exist regarding the testing supply chain, generally, for many of our institutions.

Financial considerations did not influence the COP/C decision, as the postponement will have enormous adverse financial implications. We understand the passion of the many student-athletes and their families who were disappointed by the decision, but also know there are many who have a great deal of concern and anxiety regarding the pandemic.

Moving forward, we will continue to build upon the framework that our medical experts have developed over the past five months while we take the opportunity to learn more about the virus and its effects. As we expand upon a plan to allow our student-athletes to compete as soon as it is safe to do so, we will keep our focus on creating protocols and standards set forth and established by our medical advisors that are responsive to the medical concerns evaluated by our COP/C.

To that end, the Big Ten Conference has assembled a Return to Competition Task Force consisting of members from the COP/C, sports medicine and university medical personnel, Athletic Directors, Head Coaches, Faculty Athletic Representatives and Senior Women Administrators to plan for the return of fall sports competition as soon as possible. In evaluating winter/spring models, we will explore many factors including the number of football games that can reasonably be played from a health perspective in a full calendar year while maintaining a premier competitive experience for our student-athletes culminating in a Big Ten Championship. The Big Ten Conference will continue to collect feedback from student-athletes, families, and other constituents and remains in active discussions with its television partners regarding all future plans.

We have tremendous appreciation and understanding regarding what participation in sports means to our student-athletes, their families, our campus communities and our fans. We will continue to make the best decisions possible for the health, safety and wellness of our student-athletes. We appreciate the passion of the Big Ten community and will harness that energy towards providing the best possible experience for all Big Ten student-athletes.

Kevin Warren
Commissioner
Big Ten Conference

 

The complete Big Ten statement on postponing the fall sports season

Earlier this afternoon, the Big Ten announced that the Conference will be delaying the start of all fall sports because of the current Covid-19 pandemic. The Big Ten has been followed by the PAC-12 Conference in its decision to postpone the fall sports season.

Here is the complete statement released by the Big Ten:

Earlier this afternoon, the Big Ten announced that the Conference will be delaying the start of all fall sports because of the current Covid-19 pandemic. The Big Ten has been followed by the PAC-12 Conference in its decision to postpone the fall sports season.

Here is the complete statement released by the Big Ten:

ROSEMONT, Ill. – The Big Ten Conference announced the postponement of the 2020-21 fall sports season, including all regular-season contests and Big Ten Championships and Tournaments, due to ongoing health and safety concerns related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In making its decision, which was based on multiple factors, the Big Ten Conference relied on the medical advice and counsel of the Big Ten Task Force for Emerging Infectious Diseases and the Big Ten Sports Medicine Committee.

“Our primary responsibility is to make the best possible decisions in the interest of our students, faculty and staff,” said Morton Schapiro, Chair of the Big Ten Council of Presidents/Chancellors and Northwestern University President.

“The mental and physical health and welfare of our student-athletes has been at the center of every decision we have made regarding the ability to proceed forward,” said Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren. “As time progressed and after hours of discussion with our Big Ten Task Force for Emerging Infectious Diseases and the Big Ten Sports Medicine Committee, it became abundantly clear that there was too much uncertainty regarding potential medical risks to allow our student-athletes to compete this fall.

“We know how significant the student-athlete experience can be in shaping the future of the talented young women and men who compete in the Big Ten Conference. Although that knowledge made this a painstaking decision, it did not make it difficult. While I know our decision today will be disappointing in many ways for our thousands of student-athletes and their families, I am heartened and inspired by their resilience, their insightful and discerning thoughts, and their participation through our conversations to this point. Everyone associated with the Big Ten Conference and its member institutions is committed to getting everyone back to competition as soon as it is safe to do so.”

The fall sports included in this announcement are men’s and women’s cross country, field hockey, football, men’s and women’s soccer, and women’s volleyball. The Big Ten Conference will continue to evaluate a number of options regarding these sports, including the possibility of competition in the spring. Decisions regarding winter and spring sports will also continue to be evaluated.

The Big Ten Conference is proud of its 14 world-class research institutions and has leveraged their resources and expertise to address this pandemic over the past five months. The Big Ten Task Force for Emerging Infectious Diseases and the Big Ten Sports Medicine Committee have engaged in extensive research and sharing of materials and conversations with federal, state and local government agencies, and professional and international sports organizations in order to track and better understand the daily updates surrounding this pandemic. Their advice and counsel have been invaluable as they have worked tirelessly over the past several months in their efforts to create and maintain a safe environment for athletics.

The Big Ten Conference will continue to work with medical experts and governmental authorities to gather additional information, evaluate emerging data and technologies, and monitor developments regarding the pandemic to make the best decisions possible for the health, safety and wellness of our student-athletes.

BadgersWire will be reporting any updates as the situation evolves with the possible postponement of other Power Five conferences. 

Big Ten Cancels Fall College Football Season, Might Play In Spring

The Big Ten will cancel its fall season – according to reports – and attempt to play this spring.

The Big Ten will cancel its fall season – according to reports – and attempt to play this spring.


The Big Ten is going cancel the fall season and move on to the spring.

[jwplayer CKtYFVZx]

After hinting about it over the last several weeks, and after it was leaked on Monday that the Big Ten presidents were 12-2 against playing in the fall, the league has decided to cancel the 2020 fall season and will try playing this spring.

More coming in a few moments …

[protected-iframe id=”361699434b6d70baf15f631ed2408ac1-97672683-92922408″ info=”https://www.googletagservices.com/tag/js/gpt.js” ]

Report: Big Ten football is cancelled in the fall, will attempt to play in spring

The Big Ten will be cancelling the fall football season

[lawrence-newsletter]After yesterday’s roller coaster ride of emotions for players, fans, media members, and anybody associated with college football in the Big Ten, the news that league presidents have voted against a fall season has now been confirmed by multiple sources.

The early reports are that the Big Ten will attempt to play a season in the spring, and that at least one team has already been notified that there will be no fall season. National Yahoo Sports reporter Pete Thamel broke the news first via Twitter, along with other journalists.

We will have more on this developing story throughout the day at BadgersWire including player reactions, coaches reactions, and more from around the conference.

Opinion: The current disheartening state of college football could lead to a long overdue voice for the athletes

Will the disastrous state of college football leadership lead to athletes organizing and being recognized?

There was a mixture of confusion, anger, and overwhelming sadness swirling in the college football universe as we woke up on this Monday morning preparing for the worst. Last night, the thoughts in everyones mind revolved around a matter of when, not if, the college football season would be officially cancelled.

Over the past few days, as we have neared the official cancellation of Big Ten football this fall, athletes from major conferences have joined together for a Twitter takeover, similar to the MLB and NFL player blitz that occurred recently during their battle over playing a season. Their message on Twitter is simple: We want to play. Clemson’s star QB Trevor Lawrence, who ironically would be a top pick in the draft with or without playing this season, was among those leading the charge as were many Badgers.

This piece is not about whether or not they should play, but instead a part of the #WeWantToPlay message that would shift college football in the direction of the athletes.

One piece of the statements released on Twitter by many of college football’s biggest stars sticks out above the rest: “Use our voice to establish open communication and trust between players and officials; ultimately create a college football players association.”

That sentence strikes fear in every single collegiate athletic department, and most notably within the heart of the NCAA. According to statista.com, NCAA revenue in 2019 was over 867 million dollars. As we know, not a penny of that makes its way back to players pockets. The most absurd part of it is not the fact that players do not receive paychecks, but that players cannot profit on their own success and hard work while in college by using their name and likeness.

The lack of player representation has taken a new turn on a road that has never been traveled by college football or by the nation as a whole. Now, the players have had no say in the conditions with which college football will be played this fall, or if in fact they can drive towards a safe way to play with medical professionals sitting in the front seat instead of outright cancellation.

There is a good that could outweigh the bad, however, within the mess that is college football at the moment. That good is that the organizing of college players — something that has been long overdue — looks to be speeding up.

While sitting in a Madison, Wisconsin classroom this past winter alongside twenty other seniors, I had the privilege of learning from a legendary UW graduate, former MLB commissioner Bud Selig. It was in that setting with the commissioner’s insight, that I first learned the history of player unions in professional sports, which largely started with the MLB and Marvin Miller, an economist and labor leader who was the first executive director of the players union that in professional baseball.

With Miller and the MLBPA, baseball and the sporting landscape changed forever. Players had previously been held to their clubs through the reserve clause. Free agency? A completely foreign concept in 1960. Wages and benefits were extremely low, and there was no platform for the players to voice their concerns over their conditions at work.

The 1968 MLB collective bargaining agreement, organized by Miller and the new players union, raised baseball’s minimum salary from $6,000 to $10,000, but in reality changed the way trillions of dollars in professional sports revenue were handled from then on.

College athletics is not professional sports, as the NCAA tirelessly tries to remind us on a daily basis. Despite that fact, it sure feels as though colleges operate as one of the more cutthroat businesses in America, with football providing needed revenue to keep athletic departments running. The fact is that the hard work of the athletes is what keeps those departments running, and no, they are not normal students as much as the “optics” need them to be. They are essentially working a physical, full-time job — while going to class — where they have no say in massive decisions surrounding that workplace.

The pandemic could be the catalyst for representation. Power Five players now are focusing their energy on organizing for their rights as employees in a billion dollar business, instead of getting ready for the season to start as normal. We know that college athletics is going to change after all of this is over, and the silver lining of this unprecedented disaster may be that those changes come with players demanding their voices to be heard. A short-term disaster could lead to a long-term movement that finally puts power into the hands of the players.

Big Ten Cancels Fall Season. What’s Next For College Football?

The Big Ten has canceled its 2020 football season due to concerns over the coronavirus. What’s next for college football?

The Big Ten has canceled its 2020 football season due to concerns over the coronavirus. What’s next for college football?


The Big Ten is going to do it. It’s going to cancel its 2020 college football season.

[jwplayer CKtYFVZx]

It was rumored to happen for the last few weeks, and now it’s actually happening the Big Ten is cancelling college football for the 2020 fall.

The details of what’s next are still sketchy, but commissioner Kevin Warren has been hinting at the idea of a spring football season. Forgetting that it would mean two college football seasons in ten months, and that college football in Minneapolis and Madison would be delightful in February, there aren’t any details yet on how that might work.

This all started rolling over the weekend with reports of a meeting among conference presidents about the viability of a college football season, and then Monday morning the Dan Patrick Show went with the story that the Big Ten was going to shut things down.

In the end, it was just too much. The Big Ten types have been hinting from the start that they didn’t believe they could safely make it all work. There were liability concerns, player safety issues, the lack of revenue from no fans in the stands, and then when it finally came time to practice and get it all going, the college presidents couldn’t make it work.

Oh yeah, and don’t forget the player movement side of things. Squashing the demands and the voices of players isn’t a bad thing for those who run the higher-levels of college athletics.

The Big Ten just gave the whole #WeWantToPlay movement one giant, “bless your heart.”

And now, very predictably, college football gets politicized. What could possibly go wrong?

What’s next for college football coming in a moment …

[protected-iframe id=”361699434b6d70baf15f631ed2408ac1-97672683-92922408″ info=”https://www.googletagservices.com/tag/js/gpt.js” ]

REPORT: A majority of Big Ten presidents vote against a fall season as two schools push to play

The conference has voted against a fall season

After a night filled with news that was trending towards a cancelled fall season, and a meeting last night between Big Ten presidents and chancellors, the Big Ten leaders have reportedly held a vote on whether or not they are in favor of playing college football this fall.

According to longtime talk radio host Dan Patrick, the Big Ten has voted against having the fall season with 12 of the 14 leaders in favor of cancellation.

The two schools that are in favor of playing were Iowa and Nebraska, per Dan Patrick.

We are expecting news of this vote tomorrow, as the Big Ten gets set to make an official announcement. It is clear that the Big Ten is now taking the lead on cancelling first, which many believe would create a power conference domino effect that leads to widespread cancellation of a fall football season.

Big Ten announces teams will play conference-only games for fall of 2020

The Big Ten Conference has announced that all fall sports will be comprised of conference-only matchups for the 2020 season due to COVID-19.

The Big Ten Conference announced that their schools will participate in conference-only games for all sports this fall.  The decision came Thursday, one day after the Ivy League cancelled all fall sports for the 2020 season.

This decision by the Big Ten is based on the uncertainties that are presented by the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, reaching new highs in the United States.

“We are facing uncertain and unprecedented times, and the health, safety and wellness of our student-athletes, coaches, game officials, and others associated with our sports programs and campuses remain our number one priority,” the conference released in a statement this Thursday.

Big Ten fall sports include football, men’s and women’s soccer, men’s and women’s cross country, field hockey, and women’s volleyball.  The decision was made based on medical advice.

This now begs the question of what other conferences will do to take action in securing their athletes safety.  The Big 12, Pac-12, ACC and SEC have a spotlight on themselves following a bold move by the Big Ten.

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said that the SEC “will continue to meet regularly with our campus leaders in the coming weeks, guided by medical advisors, to make the important decisions necessary to determine the best path forward related to SEC fall sports.”

“We recognize the challenges ahead and know the well-being of our student-athletes, coaches, staff and fans must remain at the forefront of those decisions,” Sankey also stated.

Since fall college athletes return to team activities on June 1st, there have been COVID-19 cases popping up in a number of schools including Ohio State, Clemson, LSU and Texas.  Ohio State suspended practices and team activities on Wednesday as a safety precaution.

The Big Ten’s statement included that the conference is “also prepared not to play in order to ensure the health, safety and wellness of our student-athletes should the circumstances so dictate.”

Georgia football’s non-conference games scheduled this season include Virginia, East Tennessee State, Louisiana Monroe and of course, Georgia Tech.  Should the SEC move to conference-only games, the Dawgs’ schedule will only get tougher, potentially adding matchups such as LSU, Ole Miss, Texas A&M, Arkansas and Mississippi State.