Notre Dame to Limit Attendance for 2020 Home Football Games

Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick informed the masses Tuesday that home football games won’t feature full crowds in 2020.

Notre Dame spent a large chunk of their Tuesday raising money with “The Fight” which raised money for students whose families have been effected by Covid-19.

The stars of the Notre Dame community aligned with Brian Kelly, Pat Connaughton, Mike Brey and plenty of others speaking on a live stream but it was athletic director Jack Swarbrick who stole the headlines.

Swarbrick was asked about if there would be fans in the stands for Notre Dame football games this fall and the athletic director didn’t sell any false hope.

We’re committed to having fans in the stands and we’ll start with the other students. My view throughout has been, if we think it’s safe for students to be on the field playing football, it should be safe for the students to be in the stands watching football. So, we’ll build off that base of the other students, faculty and staff will be a priority for us to give them an opportunity, and then our fans. We haven’t yet gotten to the question of how big that audience is. We won’t be at capacity. We’ll do something less than that. And we’ll be very careful about maintaining social distance, how the facility works, how you enter it, how you exit it, all things to be determined. We’re working hard on them.” 

-Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick on “The Fight”

Swarbrick didn’t give an answer on how many fans will be in Notre Dame Stadium this fall but it certainly won’t be the 80,795 capacity crowd that the Irish usually play in front of.

If you’ve been to Notre Dame Stadium you’re well aware how they pack you in like sardines.  Your seat on the wooden benches are wide enough for perhaps a nine year old to sit comfortably, but not anyone much older than that.

Now factor in social distancing and trying to maintain six feet of separation then that we’ve been told to keep apart and you’re looking at what, a maximum of a one-third capacity crowd?

It’s not surprising but it doesn’t mean it won’t look strange when Notre Dame Stadium is at roughly 30% capacity or whatever that number ends up being.

Oregon, Oregon State Advised to Play Without Large Crowds

One of college football’s biggest games of 2020 is now set to be played without a crowd as Oregon has banned large crowds through September.

Perhaps the biggest non-conference game this college football season is set to take place on September 12 when Ohio State travels west to take on Oregon at Autzen Stadium in what is a rematch of the 2014 College Football Playoff Championship Game.

You’d think it’d be one of, if not the toughest game on Ohio State’s schedule this season, playing in a tough place to play like Autzen.  A helping hand may have just been lent to the Buckeyes though as Oregon Governor Kate Brown announced Thursday that “The Oregon Health Authority is advising that any large gathering, at least through September, should be canceled or significantly modified.”

You can watch Governor Brown’s entire press briefing from Thursday.

North Dakota State is scheduled to play at Oregon on September 5, Ohio State comes to town on the 12th while Hawaii is slated to visit on the 19th.  If this is to get extended even a week beyond that it’d take away the crowd from the October 3 Oregon/Washington game as well.

This comes a week after University of Oregon president Michael Schill expressed doubt about having packed crowds at Autzen Stadium at any point in 2020.

“I doubt very much we’re going to have a packed stadium watching our Ducks play football,” Schill said on CNN. “We’re hoping our football games will be played, but we’re not going to take any chances with the health and safety of our student-athletes or the people who come to watch them.”

The same set of rules will obviously apply to Oregon State who is slated to host three games in September against Colorado State, Portland State and Washington State.

For what it’s worth, Notre Dame plays just one game west of South Bend, Indiana this year, that coming on Thanksgiving weekend for annual battle with USC.

This entire global pandemic tests you in various ways.  Some days I get up and think we’re about to turn a corner and that we’re about to approach our old sense of normal.  Then on others I’m convinced we’ll never see crowds of more than a couple thousand gathered in the same place ever again.

I may change my mind about this when I get out of bed Friday morning but I’m guessing Oregon just happens to be the first to announce this and that plenty of other states will soon be doing something similar.