NCAA issues next set of return-to-sport guidelines

On Thursday the NCAA released it’s latest set of guidelines for athletes and teams to return-to-sport

This from the NCAA offices, released on Thursday afternoon:

Third installment of recommendations outlines daily self-health checks, testing within 72 hours of competition for high contact risk sports

July 16, 2020 12:29pm

The NCAA Sport Science Institute has released the Resocialization of Collegiate Sport: Developing Standards for Practice and Competition to extend previous guidance and provide updated recommendations about the protection of athletes and prevention of community spread of COVID-19.

The guidelines are designed to inform schools in responding appropriately based on their specific circumstances and in the best interest of returning college athletes’ health and well-being. Many sports require close, personal contact and require specially crafted guidelines. Among the recommendations put forth:

  • Daily self-health checks.
  • The appropriate use of face coverings and social distancing during training, competition and outside of athletics.
  • Testing strategies for all athletics activities, including pre-season, regular season and post-season.
  • Testing and results within 72 hours of competition in high contact risk sports.

“Any recommendation on a pathway toward a safe return to sport will depend on the national trajectory of COVID-19 spread,” said Brian Hainline, NCAA chief medical officer. “The idea of sport resocialization is predicated on a scenario of reduced or flattened infection rates.”

“When we made the extremely difficult decision to cancel last spring’s championships it was because there was simply no way to conduct them safely,” said NCAA President Mark Emmert. “This document lays out the advice of health care professionals as to how to resume college sports if we can achieve an environment where COVID-19 rates are manageable. Today, sadly, the data point in the wrong direction. If there is to be college sports in the fall, we need to get a much better handle on the pandemic.”

The recommendations were developed in collaboration with the NCAA COVID-19 Advisory PanelAmerican Medical Society for Sports Medicine (AMSSM) COVID-19 Working GroupAutonomy-5 Medical Advisory GroupNational Medical Association, and NCAA Committee on Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports Prevention and Performance Subcommittee. The guidance also takes into consideration recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

It is the latest update to the initial Core Principles of Resocialization of Collegiate Sport recommendations, providing guidelines and practices that schools should consider as they develop their own mitigation plans. The previously released Action Plan Considerations offered recommendations to help schools mitigate risks of COVID-19 spread as staff and student-athletes return.

For more information on the NCAA’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic, visit ncaa.org/covid-19.

When Will NCAA Allow College Sports to Return?

Will we have college football in 2020? The NCAA released a plan for a return to the playing field for college sports in 2020.

We sit here on May 7 with plenty wondering when we will get sports back.  Sure, NASCAR hits the track in ten days in front of an empty crowd but when might we get college sports back?  The NCAA has finally given at least a hint of that.

The NCAA has released their three phases of re-socialization which we’ll examine a bit here as the organization offered a premise for resuming practice and competition.

First:  Core principles of resocialization of collegiate sport

NCAA Statement Unclear on COVID-19 and NCAA Championship

Consider the NCAA the masters of saying something, yet saying nothing at the same time.  

Consider the NCAA the masters of saying something, yet saying nothing at the same time.

With the outbreak of COVID-19 or Coronavirus as the world has been calling it, the rumors and thoughts that the NCAA Tournament might be played in an empty stadium.  Many, myself included, downplayed initial reports of this a week or so ago but in their statement released Tuesday afternoon, the NCAA was entirely non-committal to the games having or not having crowds.

The NCAA continues to assess how COVID-19 impacts the conduct of our tournaments and events. We are consulting with public health officials and our COVID-19 advisory panel, who are leading experts in epidemiology and public health, and will make decisions in the coming days.  – NCAA on March 10, 2020

So what the heck does that mean?

I interpret it as anything and everything is on the table.  The world and country are in a state of panic and nobody has any interest in being liable for a stadium full of fans being exposed to the virus.  It will certainly be interesting to see how all of this goes, especially after the ACC Tournament has already begun in Greensboro, North Carolina with no plan whatsoever to keep fans from the games while most of the other power conferences get their tournaments started Wednesday.

Stay tuned, this story isn’t going away and is only going to get bigger in the coming days and probably weeks.