Tennessee Senate passes transgender high school athletes bill

The Tennessee state Senate approved a bill barring transgender athletes from playing middle and HS sports under their gender identity.

The Tennessee state Senate voted 27-6 Monday night to approve a bill that would bar transgender student-athletes from participating in middle and high school athletics under their gender identity.

The bill, filed by Sen. Joey Hensley, R-Hohenwald, and Rep. Scott Cepicky, R-Culleoka, requires transgender athletes in middle and high school to compete in athletic competitions under their sex at birth, according to the Tennessean. The bill makes no exception for transgender student-athletes receiving gender-affirming care.

Advocates of the bill have argued that banning transgender student-athletes from participating in sports promotes fairness. However, LGBTQ rights activists are against the bill, claiming it is discriminatory against transgender teens and student-athletes in specific.

There has not been any evidence of transgender athletic participation in Tennessee scholastic sports. The bill, however, was raised in an effort to address what was deemed a “potential problem” before the issue escalated further.

“To say it’s not a problem in Tennessee may be true, but it will be a problem in Tennessee probably sooner than we think,” said Sen. Kerry Roberts, R-Springfield.

According to the Tennessean, bills banning transgender student-athletes from participating in sports under their gender identity have passed at least one legislative chamber in six states, including Tennessee. At least 21 states have introduced similar legislation to the bill just passed in Tennessee.

Coaches and student-athletes from around Florida motivated to vote

Among those are college athletes who have decided their voices can be powerful and they no longer will “shut up and dribble.”

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Editor’s note: This article was originally published in the Palm Beach Post and has been republished in full below. 

More than 70 million Americans already have cast a ballot ahead of Tuesday’s election, many of those young people eligible to vote for the first time or who just could not be bothered to take time out of their social schedule to stand in line.

Among those are college athletes who have decided their voices can be powerful and they no longer will “shut up and dribble.”

“I feel like that it’s extremely important (to vote), especially now that we’re coming of age,” Florida Gators running back Malik Davis said. “Every vote makes a difference.”

These movements, whether in the form or protests or voter registration rallies, have been sparked by several factors, including a contentious presidential election between Republican Donald Trump and his Democratic challenger Joe Biden, a summer filled with protests over social injustices and a global coronavirus pandemic that has become politicized.

The NCAA even took notice, making Election Day an athletic holiday by approving a measure that states Division I athletes will not be required to participate in “countable athletically related activities” on the first Tuesday after Nov. 1 every year, beginning in 2020.

The legislation was proposed by the Division I Student-Athlete Advisory Committee to allow athletes to participate in civic engagement, including voting or community service.

“It gives our players who may not have a chance to vote – there’s no telling what the lines will be like on election day – it gives them an opportunity to get out there and to do it,” Miami Hurricanes coach Manny Diaz said. “This is a great chance to express one of the great things of what it means to be an American and have their voice heard, whatever side they are on, and be a part of the democratic process.”

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Diaz has the perspective of having been around politics his entire life with his father, Manny, the mayor of Miami from 2001-2009. Not so for Florida’s Dan Mullen, who is more focused on his job and winning football games.

Mullen is not happy the NCAA is forcing coaches to adjust their schedules. The Gators coach is under pressure after losing at Texas A&M three weeks ago and then saying he’d like the university to ignore its own guidelines for fighting the pandemic and allow 90,000 fans into Ben Hill Griffin Stadium. That was followed by the Gators being forced to postpone two games after an outbreak within the team and Mullen announcing two weeks ago he tested positive for COVID-19.

Mullen this week lamented having to go a day without practice to allow players who have been unable to vote to cast their ballot. He said early voting, which he took advantage of, allows the players enough of an opportunity without having to disrupt his schedule on election day.

“I wasn’t a big fan with the NCAA doing that,” Mullen said during the SEC teleconference. “It throws you completely off your game-week routine, which obviously to me is very dangerous.

“Normally we’re off on Sunday and that’s a day of rest and recovery after a game. We can’t do that now. We have got to go immediately into preparation for the next game. We have to make sure our guys are prepared and safe for the game. It’s really kind of thrown that off.”

That next game happens to be against Georgia, Florida’s biggest SEC rival.

The polarizing event sparking the nationwide movement came on Memorial Day when George Floyd, a Black man, died in Minneapolis while a white police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes. That spurred a generation of young people to become more socially aware and realize one of the ways to make sure things change is to vote.

And with sports in a global timeout this summer because of the pandemic, athletes across the nation used that down time to register to vote. Team leaders arranged for their teammates to sign up as a group, which led to scenes like the one at Missouri, where more than 60 football players marched from campus to the Boone County Courthouse in Columbia to register.

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Or at Florida, where the Gators had a full-team voter registration drive. Or at Florida State where tight end Cam McDonald sat outside the locker room with a voter registration application and a guide to make sure teammates understood the process.

“It’s been something that has been constant throughout the semester, not just with our football team, with our athletic department,” Florida State coach Mike Norvell said. “We try to keep those reminders for them and just encourage them that this is an opportunity for you to have a voice and to be able to use that voice for a significant impact. It’s been nice seeing our guys really embrace that.”

Diaz said Miami’s social justice council, headed by running backs coach Eric Hickson, has succeeded in getting every football player registered to vote. And while the presidential election has energized the country, Diaz is making sure his players understand voting is much more than showing up at the polls every four years to elect the leader of our country.

“We’re trying to really explain to our players the ins and outs of local government,” he said. “I think everybody understands what it means to elect a president. I don’t know that our players have the understanding of who is in charge of what on the local ballot.

“A lot of what occurs in our community is dictated by the local governments, county and city. We don’t spend enough time on that. Who’s accountable if I don’t like something in my community? A lot of our guys don’t know.”

Florida linebacker James Houston said similar conversations are happening within the Gators team.

“We get in our little groups and talk politics,” Houston said.

The culmination of the movement and the registration initiatives comes Tuesday. But the push to vote started weeks ago. Coaches and players stressed voting early anticipating a chaotic election day.

And with Florida a tight battle ground state for such an important presidential election, young people more than any other time could make a difference.

“We’re really encouraging our guys to go early vote,” FAU coach Willie Taggart said. “I know Tuesday we won’t do anything football-wise to allow those guys to go out and vote. … but we’re really encouraging them to go early vote and, if they have time, to go do it now. We have an early voting station here on campus, so it would be great for our guys to go over and knock that out.

“I voted. Done deal.”

Curt Weiler (Tallahassee), Graham Hall (Gainesville) and Reese Furlow (Boca Raton) contributed to this report

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Gators football sees no new COVID-19 cases this week

There were 462 total tests within the department in the last week, and only two returned positive cases, a rate of just 0.4 percent.

The newest COVID-19 testing data from the University of Florida Athletic Association is good news for the program.

There have been no new positive cases on the football team this week, as of Monday.

The team conducted 274 tests between Sept. 21 and Sept. 28, and none of them returned a positive result. The outlook is good for the athletic department in general, as well.

There were 462 total tests within the department in the last week, and only two returned positive cases, a rate of just 0.4 percent.

This comes just two weeks after 61 positive tests in a six-day span shut down operations for the baseball team and lacrosse team, who accounted for a combined 46 of those cases.

It appears that after suffering severe outbreaks earlier in the month, the Gators program is now doing a better job of containing the spread of the virus. It just remains to be seen how capable it will be of maintaining the same standards over the course of a season.

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UF sees increase in COVID-19 cases, pauses lacrosse and baseball activities

Of those cases, 31 are on Florida’s lacrosse team and 15 are on the baseball team. Both programs have now paused all activities.

The University of Florida Athletic Association released updated COVID-19 testing data for student-athletes, and the last week has brought an increase in cases both within the athletic department at large and the football program specifically.

When data was last released on Wednesday, there had been seven total positive cases in the month of September. In the last six days, the athletic department has seen 61 new cases from 337 new tests.

Of those cases, 31 are on the lacrosse team and 15 are on the baseball team. Both programs have now paused all activities.

This comes a day after the soccer team postponed its season opener due to three positive cases.

The football program has seen its share of cases as well, though not to the same degree as other programs. It has conducted 129 tests in the last six days, returning six positives. On Wednesday, there had been just one case on the team this month.

Since players returned on May 26, the UF football team has seen 28 total positive cases. It has, however, managed to keep the positive test rate relatively low this month at just three percent.

The athletic department as a whole is in a much worse spot. Since the beginning of this month, the total positive test rate at Florida has been 13 percent.

While the steps the football program has taken to contain the spread of the virus seems to be at least partially working, other programs at the school appear to be struggling much more to limit outbreaks, and it’s unclear what that could mean for the viability of non-football sports this year.

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Florida Gators athletics release updated COVID-19 testing information

On Wednesday, the University of Florida Athletic Association released updated data regarding testing results for COVID-19 as of September 7.

On Wednesday, the University of Florida Athletic Association released updated data regarding testing results for COVID-19. The results are up-to-date as of Monday, Sept. 7.

In total, 1,227 UF student-athletes have been tested since they returned to campus on May 26. Of those, 42 have returned positive tests during that time frame, just a 3.4 percent positive test rate. So far during the month of September, that rate hasn’t changed much. There have been 191 tests administered this month with seven positive results, a 3.7 percent positive rate.

Within the football program specifically, the positivity rate is slightly higher than the total athletic department rate. In total, 523 tests have been given since the end of May with 22 positive results (a rate of 4.2 percent).

However, the month of September gives signs for optimism, as the positive test rate for the football program has not only dropped far below its total over the last four months but also far below the general positivity rate within the athletic department.

There have been a total of 101 tests administered this month, and only one has turned back positive.

It’s unclear if this precipitous drop will be sustainable once the season potentially starts, as programs around the country have seen much more serious outbreaks within their rosters. But for now, it appears as if the steps taken by the UF football program, at least recently, are mostly working.

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Zero positive coronavirus test results reported for Florida Gators football

The school released its latest coronavirus testing data with only one positive result reported for the month of August among all sports. 

Great news for University of Florida sports fans! On Tuesday, the school released its coronavirus testing data taken from student-athletes starting on May 26 and ending yesterday, with only one positive COVID-19 result reported for the month of August among all sports.

Even better news: the Gators football team reported no positive results this past month. Head coach Dan Mullen made mention of the team’s string of zero positives in a press conference via Zoom earlier in the day, suggesting that his team is set to play despite the ongoing pandemic.

Since May 26, 809 tests overall were administered to student-athletes with 35 of them testing positive for a 4.3 percent positivity rate, according to the data; in August, only one test came back positive out of 479 samples. The numbers for the football squad are even better, improving from 21 positives in 359 on campus since May to zero out of 197 tested in August. 

While it has yet to be seen if Florida and the rest of the Southeastern Conference will actually play ball this fall, these numbers are certainly encouraging. If the Gators can keep the virus at bay, at very least they will be set to win a war of attrition with other teams who may not be so fortunate in evading the dark cloud of the coronavirus over the course of the season.

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Updated football practice schedule announced by Southeastern Conference

The revised calendar provides student-athletes with more days off and fewer practices than required by the NCAA.

The Southeastern Conference announced on Tuesday its adjusted dates for preseason football activities for its member schools with the first allowable practice now updated to August 17.

The press release includes the following.

The new preseason calendar was developed based on recommendations of the SEC’s Return to Activity and Medical Guidance Task Force.

Last week the SEC announced its intention to begin the 2020 season on September 26 as it continues to monitor developments around COVID-19. The original start date of September 5 would have allowed for preseason football practice to begin August 7.

In the revised SEC preseason football calendar, from August 7-16 schools are permitted to conduct up to 14 hours per week of strength and conditioning, meetings and walkthroughs.

Beginning August 17 and until the opening game, schools are allowed 25 practices with a limit of 20 hours per week of practice time. A five-day acclimatization period is required, with two days in helmets only, two days in shells and the fifth day in full pads.

Schools will be required to provide student-athletes a minimum of two days off each week until the week before the first game of the season.

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