Report: Big Ten presidents meeting Saturday, fall sports cancelation still on the table

All options are on the table, including cancellation, according to Yahoo!’s Pete Thamel.

Big Ten football this fall is not a full go.

According to Yahoo!’s Pete Thamel, the presidents of Big Ten universities are meeting today to discuss how to proceed with fall sports during the COVID-19 pandemic, with all options on the table.

As Thamel says, momentum is gaining for canceling the fall football season. Earlier Saturday the presidents of the Mid American Conference voted unanimously to cancel fall sports with the plan to move them all to the spring.

While this news is less than comforting to those wanting football this fall, a full cancelation doesn’t seem imminent according to the AP’s Ralph Russo and ESPN’s Adam Rittenberg.

So while a decision to scrap the Big Ten season today seems unlikely, there is clearly still concern about playing football this fall at the highest levels of the Big Ten’s 14 members.

The conference has also announced that football practices will not stay on their traditional timeline of a two-day ramp up period to full padded practices. Right now football will be practiced in helmets and shorts for the foreseeable future.

Many Big Ten teams, including Michigan State, began fall camp on Friday. Rutgers is still in a two-week quarantine due to a large COVID-19 outbreak on their team. Northwestern was just cleared to resume workouts after a positive test in their ranks was determined to be a false positive.

We will have more on this story was it develops.

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PGA Tour confirms layoffs; says job cuts will ‘most efficiently deal with the current climate’

As the PGA Championship started at TPC Harding Park this week, the PGA Tour confirmed a number of job cuts.

Even though golf has returned, the ramifications of the coronavirus pandemic are still being felt through the industry.

As the PGA Championship started at TPC Harding Park this week, the PGA Tour confirmed a number of job cuts to staff personnel, including many who work for PGATour.com.

The Tour did not reveal the number of individuals laid off, but PGA Tour Vice President of Communications Joel Schuchmann said the moves will help position the Tour moving forward.

“As a result of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, the PGA Tour – much like many other organizations – has had to identify ways to streamline our operations,” Schuchmann said in a statement.

“While it is never easy to say goodbye to valuable members of the Tour family, this week’s targeted job cuts will allow us to most efficiently deal with the current climate and prepare for 2021 and beyond.”

Without ticket sales and with a number of events eliminated from the 2019-20 schedule, the Tour is dealing with reduced revenues.

Purses haven’t been cut for those events that have been played, but the Tour is also trying to fend off advances from the Premier Golf League, which, according to a recent report in The Guardian, sent formal offer letters worth “hundreds of millions of dollars” to a handful of players.

This story is developing and will be updated.

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Big Ten football players publish COVID-19 proposal in letter to the conference, NCAA

The letter to the NCAA and the Big Ten is written on behalf of more than 1,000 football players

More than 1,000 Big Ten football players have published a letter to the conference and the NCAA with proposals to protect the well-being of all athletes in the conference.

Published in the Player’s Tribune the letter is written by College Athlete Unity (CAU) on behalf of more than 1,000 football players in the conference. The players cite as a complaint the NCAA’s “laissez-faire approach,” in dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic, opting to let the schools and conferences handle everything on their own. The players say NCAA leadership has not requested their input, which inspired the need for the letter and proposals.

Some of the highlight proposals are:

  • Third-party, approved by players, to handle all aspects of COVID-19 testing.
  • Severe penalties for non-compliance
  • Social distancing requirements and mandatory mask-wearing in and around athletic facilities by coaches, staff, players, vendors, press, and visitors
  • Minimum cleaning and sanitation protocols for all uniforms, equipment, and athletic facilities, including visitor locker rooms
  • Contact-tracing protocols for anyone who comes into contact with college athletes and team personnel who test positive
  • Testing of everyone who comes into contact with college athletes, including coaches, trainers, medical staff, nutrition staff, referees, media, etc.
  • In-season testing three days a week.
  • Guarantee of scholarships for players opting out due to COVID-19.
  • Redshirts for players unable to play more than 40% of their season due to COVID-19.
  • Coverage for all out-of-pocket medical expenses related to COVID-19 (both short-term and long-term) incurred by active college athletes

There are more proposals from the players, which you can read on the Player’s Tribune.

On Wednesday the Big Ten released its modified ten-game conference-only football schedule.

A large group of players from the PAC-12 made similar demands of their conference and the NCAA earlier in the week.

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Big Ten releases updated football schedule, MSU now plays Michigan on the road

The Big Ten season is still slated to kick off the week of September 3.

If football is going to happen in the Big Ten this fall, it will be under a modified schedule.

The conference has released its new ten-game conference-only schedule to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic and there are a handful of notable changes. However the season will start as planned the week of September 3.

For Michigan State fans the biggest change is the flipping of locations for the Michigan and Indiana games. Michigan State will now travel to Ann Arbor and host Indiana, same as the 2019 season. MSU also adds an end-of-season game on the road against Nebraska. The Spartans lost to the Cornhuskers in Lincoln in 2018.

MSU will now open the season hosting Minnesota instead of previously scheduled opponent Northwestern. That game has now moved to week three. Every Big Ten team has two scheduled bye weeks and an open week at the end of the season to help with flexibility int he event of postponements or rescheduling.

Currently two Big Ten teams, Rutgers and Michigan State, are under a team-wide quarantine after COVID-19 outbreaks within the program. MSU is scheduled to end quarantine Wednesday, while Rutgers recently announced its number of cases on the team had almost doubled from 15 to 28. Northwestern also stopped workouts this week due to a positive test within their ranks.

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Report: Big Ten to release ten-game football schedule on Tuesday

The conference is expected to release an update 10-game conference-only schedule.

According to a report from AI’com’s John Talty the Big Ten is going to release an updated 2020 football schedule on Tuesday.

The Big Ten had previously announced the conference would move all fall sports–including football–to a ten-game conference-only schedule due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Currently Big Ten teams have just nine games on their schedule. There is no word yet on how the conference will adjust the schedule. Expectation is a priority will be placed on division and rivalry games being played early in the season.

The ACC recently did the same as the Big Ten, but eliminated divisions for the season while adding Notre Dame to the conference for one year.

Thus far the PAC-12 and SEC have joined the Big Ten and ACC in eliminating non-conference games. The Big 12 is the only power five conference to not eliminate any potential football opponents.

On Monday afternoon Michigan State’s current week one opponent Northwestern announced they would be shutting down football workouts due to a positive COVID test. MSU’s football team is currently nearing the end of a 14-day quarantine resulting from a small outbreak amongst the team. That quarantine is scheduled to run through August 4.

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Report: NFLPA says 12 rookies have tested positive for COVID-19

The NFLPA told its players Friday a dozen rookies have tested positive for COVID-19.

The NFL is not exempt from the dangers of COVID-19. A number of players have tested positive already and Friday there was a report the NFLPA lets its members know a dozen rookies have tested positive for the coronavirus.

Per the report:

Tom Pelissero added the results are from the nine NFL teams that have already received test results from the initial round of leaguewide screening that recently took place.

Faced with the expectation that there would be players that tested positive, the NFL plans to isolate those individuals and prevent the spreading of the virus through robust testing, contact tracing, and education, Pelissero reported.

Rookies were scheduled to start reporting to training camp Tuesday. They will be tested twice for COVID-19 and need two negative results before being allowed to join the practice facility.

Among veterans who have tested positive are Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott, Rams center Brian Allen, Broncos edge rusher Von Miller and Rams left tackle Andrew Whitworth.

NFL to have daily COVID-19 testing for first 2 weeks of training camp

The NFL and NFLPA entered this week looking to get many important issues solved concerning the safety protocols for COVID-19, and it appears both sides have found common ground on the top issue: the frequency of testing. Per NFL Network’s Judy …

The NFL and NFLPA entered this week looking to get many important issues solved concerning the safety protocols for COVID-19, and it appears both sides have found common ground on the top issue: the frequency of testing. Per NFL Network’s Judy Batista, there will be daily testing for all organizations for the first 14 days of camp.

The news was first reported by Pro Football Talk’s Mike Florio.

This news comes after players, including Chris Conley of the Jacksonville Jaguars, voiced their displeasure about the NFL’s handling of their COVID-19 protocols. Now, it appears the players got what they wanted temporarily, though the frequency of testing past that point could change.

Per Battista, the plan is to examine the data gathered from the tests of players, coaches, and staff members who are in close contact within each team’s facility. From that point, if the rate of positive tests is below the 5% mark, the NFL will move to testing every other day.

To help track interactions when the players return, they will wear devices at their facility, practice, and when each team travels to trace what player came in contact with each other throughout the day. From that point, team doctors can find the source of infection quickly and isolate that player from the facility. Of course, this will all come as each organization practices social distancing and other safety protocols.

Under the proposed testing protocols, players who test positive but have no symptoms will be allowed to return to their respective facilities after 10 days, or if he tests negative twice within five days. Players that do test positive and show symptoms will be allowed to return after at least 10 days after their initial symptoms and at least three days have passed since the player last endured symptoms.

BioReference Laboratories will be the company handling the testing and analysis for the NFL. Per Florio, the league’s deal is for 120 tests per day, though extra tests will be available for $125.

In the Jags’ case, all players must report to training camp by July 28. Afterward, they are scheduled to have two preseason games against the Tampa Bay Bucs and the league’s Washington franchise — at least for now.

Chris Conley voices displeasure about NFL’s handling of COVID-19 safety protocols

The players of the NFL have voiced their opinions about testing before the season starts and Chris Conley is among those who aren’t happy.

It’s nearly time for the NFL to restart operations as players will be reporting to camp as soon as Monday for the Kansas City Chiefs and Houston Texans. However, the NFLPA has some issues they would like ironed out as soon as possible, the most notable of which is the frequency of testing for COVID-19.

Many would agree that it feels like the league has taken its time when it comes to getting an adequate testing protocol for its players, which will be key in making things as safe as possible for each team. Jacksonville Jaguars receiver Chris Conley would definitely agree as he, alongside several other players, called the league out Sunday for dragging their feet on the matter.

The veteran took to Twitter while also stating that the NFL has ignored recommendations by medical professionals hired by the union to help make each facility safer.

Conley’s statements drew some backlash, which caused him to follow up with the tweet below.

Conley brought up a point not widely discussed in the league today: one case of COVID-19 could easily devastate a team, especially those who can’t afford to lose certain starters for weeks at a time. If the goal is to win and protect its players, the league should definitely consider this added hurdle in planning a season during a global pandemic.

Players certainly can’t be blamed for wanting safer conditions, especially after the NFL has had since early spring to put effective plans in place. Additionally, there are certain states that are considered “hot spots” for the coronavirus, putting the teams that play there at higher risk than others. With Florida routinely setting a new record for new infections, players from the Jags, Miami Dolphins, and Tampa Bay Bucs should be exercising the cautions necessary to mitigate risk.

It remains to be seen if both sides can meet in the middle, but this could spell trouble if more players take issue with the league’s plans.

Training camps will start on time, but what is everyone walking into?

The NFL has decreed that training camps will start on time, but there precious few details have been decided.

Per Tom Pelissero of the NFL Network, the NFL and its 32 teams have agreed that under the current Collective Bargaining Agreement, training camp will start on time. This means that rookies will report on July 21, quarterbacks and injured players on July 23, and all other players on July 28. The dates are applicable for all teams except for the Texans and Chiefs, who will report earlier as the two teams are scheduled to start the regular season on Thursday, September 10. Chiefs rookies and quarterbacks will report Monday, July 20, as will Texans rookies.

Also per Pelissero, “As of now, only 20 players would be allowed in the facility at a time, until the NFLPA signs off on infectious disease emergency response plans for each club. If protocols aren’t met, a grievance could follow. But clubs have the right to set reporting dates within CBA rules.”

That caveat is indicative of how many moving parts there are when scheduling things in the middle of a coronavirus pandemic, and how many things have not yet been decided between the NFL and the NFLPA to date.

In a Friday conference call with national media, NFLPA Executive Director DeMaurice Smith, Assistant Executive Director of External Affairs George Atallah, and President JC Tretter (who is also the center for the Cleveland Browns) discussed where things stand at this point regarding the safety of all players, coaches, executives, and other team staff.

At this point the league and the players’ association have not agreed on the number of preseason games, or whether there will be preseason games at all. (If you’re betting on the side of the NFLPA, bet on no preseason games). There is not an agreed-upon protocol regarding the frequency of testing. Nor is there an assurance that everyone involved will adhere to whatever guidelines the two parties must agree on before training camps can reasonably start, never mind the season itself. The NFL has been a “ready-fire-aim” organization through most of Roger Goodell’s tenure, but the danger in acting in this fashion now is unprecedented.

“So, about everyone doing the right thing, everybody in that community, everybody in that facility has to do the right thing: the coaches, the staff, the players,” Tretter said. “We all have a responsibility to keep each other safe knowing wrong decisions at the facility, wrong decisions in the community outside the facility have direct impacts on the players next to you, the staff member next to you, and what their family member might catch as well coming home from that facility. So, it’s not just about players’ decisions as well.

“We’ve had coaches come forward and talk about protocols being too much to ask, coaches come forward and saying they think everybody is going to get sick and we’ll just see how sick they get. Those attitudes can’t happen because this is all of us in this together. No one can just wish this away or just expect this to go away. There are consequences for getting sick. There are consequences players’ families have to face, and that’s my job as representative of the players is to try to provide as safe a workplace as possible and be able to tell my wife, talk to other players’ families, and let them know all we’ve done to try to make this as safe as possible for their husbands and their families when they have to come home from work. So, this is all about making the right decisions.”

Rams left tackle Andrew Whitworth, who was also on the call, doesn’t need to be told how contagious coronavirus can be, and how quickly things can spread.

“We had a family member that simply went to lunch with a friend and, innocent as it can be, and a couple days later we’re traveling all together and she started to not feel well and ended up deciding to go get a test. Next thing we know, she had it. A couple days later, my wife and I had it. A couple days after that, our kids had it. So, we were about seven for seven at that point. And unfortunately we had just visited my wife’s family and we were traveling with them as well and her mom and dad both got it. Obviously people of an older age it’s much — it seems to be much tougher, and it was on them. And unfortunately her dad got to a state where he had to be hospitalized.

“Luckily for us, such blessings we got him home about four or five days ago. He’s home with us now and we’re very blessed to have him and him be okay. But it was definitely a scary thing and realized how contagious this really is. It doesn’t make and it can spread like wildfire. For us, it’s affected us personally. It’s scary. But for our family and our kids, we ended up okay and everything seemed to go pretty normal, pretty mild case, but for her parents it wasn’t that way.”

Take that situation and add the complications inherent in a sport where players are in close contact and are running into other players in practices, and into opponents in games, and the absolute need for protocols becomes even more obvious.

“Obviously I’m a center,” Tretter said. “So, I’m living it, and we’ll start off this time more than any I have a dangerous job, not just what normal football is like, but what with what’s going on in the world, my job has gotten especially dangerous. This is going to be a battle of risk mitigation, finding guys opportunities to make safe decisions, and try to stay as safe as possible. But you can pull up almost any picture from a December winter game and can see how much breath is being blown back and forth a yard away from each other, and understanding how this virus is transmitted, what’s going to be going on with sick individuals with the offensive and defensive line or any play or any player.

“Those are the really tough decisions that we continue to ask on and try to get these protocols right and that’s why the health and safety aspect is so important in this. Because we all are at risk, our families are at risk, and different positions are maybe more so at risk, combining that with CDC guidelines with what underlying conditions make you more vulnerable, height and body mass index. Now, you’re looking at a player who is more exposed and has an underlying condition. Those are the questions guys have to understand.”

And if the NFL underestimates the odds of cloud contagion happening, the consequences could be graphic. This is where talk of shutting a season down before it even begins might come into play.

We’ve got some of the first calls on the testing protocols and how you get back from a positive tests from symptoms from being in close contact with someone with symptoms, being in close contact with someone who tested positive,” Tretter said. “And there is a quarantine period if you’re in close contact from someone who tested positive. The question that we asked is if someone — if the center tests positive on a Friday and there’s a quarantine period for all of his close contacts, well, if I just came from a practice where I’ve been in a huddle with all of my offensive teammates, been doing individual drills with all my linemen, been blocking the defensive linemen and linebackers all afternoon, well, aren’t we talking about 35 guys being in close contact with me? And if they’re all in quarantine for the next couple of days, what does Sunday’s game look like?

“Those are the questions that the league needs to offer their opinion on how this will move forward with. And then when you talk about what changes need to be made, maybe the schedule of how the week looks needs to be different to monitor what close contacts you have and avoiding those situations where one positive test on a wrong day late in the week derails an entire team because all the people that were close contacts now need to get through the protocols to make sure they’re not sick and transmitting this virus to everyone around them. You don’t have enough bodies to put on the field to play.”

Not that the NFL has ever cared proactively about player safety — the league has always been forced to give lip service to the idea, much less actual implementation of protocols in the best interests of its workforce. But in a time where there are serious hotspots in states where multiple NFL teams play (Florida and Texas being the most obvious examples), there is a legitimate question to be asked: How is any of this going to work on a practical, day-to-day basis?

“On the frequency of testing, we believe that daily testing is important, especially given some of these hot spots, and right now we don’t plan on changing that position,” Smith said. “It doesn’t mean that we won’t continue to talk about it, but we were clear about our belief that daily testing is going to be necessary and we’re always open to the plans to make our players as safe as possible. As far as daily testing, that’s where we are.

“The other sticking points about preseason… we have two concerns about the preseason. First, the joint task force agreed on an acclimation period for our guys to get them ready for football, and a lot of that frankly was influenced by what we learned coming back into camp after the 2011 season and the number of injuries, the spike in injuries because we didn’t feel there was the right acclimation. So, we’re going to insist and continue to fight for the right acclimation period. Preseason impacts that, but also the other issue about preseason is we believe that the right focus for our players and our business is not only coming up with a way to start the season, but to contemplate a way to finish it. And engaging in two games where players would be flying all over the country and then being together to engage in work, we feel that doing that prior to the season doesn’t properly influence or increase the likelihood of starting and finishing the season on time.”

Daily testing is important. Having everyone take the protocols seriously (once they’re agreed on and actually put in place) is crucial. Smith ended the conference call with the most important part of the equation for all involved.

“Going forward in this, we understand we’re trying to make a lot of decisions about what’s in the best health and safety for our players. But I’ll tell you right now, we’re in a place where very, very simply, what’s good for the country is good for sports. And something as simple as wearing a mask will have probably the most significant impact on that and whether sports return in this country. And that’s not a political statement. That’s a common sense and scientific statement. And, so, where I think our guys can probably be incredibly helpful and stepping out onto larger stage other than football is nothing will bring fans back to our stadiums than a simple decision across the country to wear a mask.”

That there are still so many important things up in the air with just a couple days before training camps begin should be of grave concern to all involved. The NFL is a ruthless for-profit enterprise and always has been, but neither the league nor the NFLPA can afford to treat COVID-19 as some sort of injury issue that happens over time. The consequences for going into any part of the 2020 season with half measures will be swift, severe, and long-lasting. Which is why everyone in charge of deciding these issues had better believe that it’s now about dotting all the I’s and crossing all the T’s, and not just about sending out a memo and hoping things work out because they always have.

We are all living in unprecedented times. We have seen exactly what horrible things can happen to America with an unprepared response. The NFL and NFLPA must learn from this example and do better, even with little time to spare.

Michigan State announces pay cuts in athletic department, including salaries of Tom Izzo and Mel Tucker

Tom Izzo and Mel Tucker will have their salaries reduced by 7% to help the department combat losses sustained during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Michigan State University has announced a number of salary reductions in the athletic department to help cope with financial losses due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Michigan State basketball coach Tom Izzo and football coach Mel Tucker will see their salaries reduced by the most total money, while athletic director Bill Beekman will take the greatest cut by percentage at 10% of his $772,00- salary. All staff members that make $100,000 or more annually will see a reduction in pay.

Izzo and Tucker are among a number of coaches making more than $500,000 that will see their pay reduced by 7%. Also included are six of Tucker’s assistants and MSU women’s basketball coach Suzy Merchant.

Tucker’s reduction will come off his base pay, which is listed as $3.8 million. Meanwhile Izzo’s base pay is around $430,000, but his salary reduction will be based off of his total compensation, which is closer to $3.5 million.

Other reductions within the department will be levied on a tiered scale: 6% for salaries between $400,000 to $499,999, 5% for salaries between $300,000 to $399,999, 4% for salaries between $200,000 to $299,999, 2.25% for salaries between $150,000 to $199,999, and 2% for salaries between $100,000 to $149,999.

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