Will ‘splash shields’ actually work for the 2020 college football season?

The reasoning and intention behind using the shields are solid, but may simply not be reasonable in the end.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published by our sister site LSU Wire and has been republished in its entirety below. 

It’s already been a rough week for college football, with the Big Ten and the PAC-12 officially canceling their 2020 season.

But conferences like the Big 12 and SEC have made clear they plan to continue pushing forward to put teams on the field this fall.

Of course, this season will be unlike any we’ve seen before in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, and “splash shields” are one thing that’s being tried to protect players from contracting the virus.

They haven’t exactly been well-received, though, and Tulane head coach Willie Fritz recently said his Green Wave had done away with them for the meantime.

His players won’t be wearing them unless the American Athletic Conference forces them to.

“Our players felt like their heads were in an oven,” he said in a report from The Athletic’s Brody Miller.

Just down the road, LSU football has also been experimenting with the shields, and the players have expressed similar disdain for them.

Tigers offensive lineman Austin Deculus said it was like “breathing in a Ziploc bag” and linebacker Soni Fonua also expressed concern about breathing in the helmet.

Medical experts have said that wearing a mask can significantly cut down the spread of the coronavirus if everyone wears then for four-to-six weeks, and the concept with the full-face shields is similar.

The question is as to if players will actually be able to make it through a game wearing them this season, especially for teams in the South that deal with high temperatures well into the fall.

The reasoning and intention behind using the shields are solid, but may simply not be reasonable in the end.

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Report: NFL to recommend players wear face shields

The National Football League is doing everything possible to make the 2020 season a reality in the wake of the COVID-19 outbreak.

The National Football League is doing everything possible to make the 2020 season a reality in the wake of the COVID-19 outbreak.

After cancelling the preseason on Wednesday, it was reported by NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo that the league will recommend, but not require players to wear face shields.

The NFL has been working with Oakley to create a mask/shield that can protect players from spreading the virus without restricting them.

How realistic that goal is and whether or not the league will mandate some sort of face shield by the time the season starts remains to be seen.

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Report: NFL will recommend, not require players to wear face shields

The NFL wants players to wear the face shield it developed with Oakley but will not force them to do so.

The COVID-19 pandemic has everyone scrambling for ways to make life safer. The NFL is no different as it is working with Oakley to create face shields that will enable players to stay healthy and comfortable while engaged in the contact sport.

Mike Garafolo of NFL Network provided an update Thursday, saying while the league would like for its players to wear the face shields it will not require them to do so.

The designs were released earlier this month.