Daily COVID-19 testing paying off for Seahawks with no positive tests

The Seattle Seahawks made it through training camp and the first two weeks of the 2020 NFL regular season without a positive COVID-19 test.

The Seattle Seahawks have managed to get through training camp and nearly two full weeks of the regular NFL season without a single positive COVID-19 test. While wide receiver John Ursua did have a false-positive early on, the Seahawks have been diligent in preventing a coronavirus outbreak.

“It’s a really big deal,” coach Pete Carroll said during his Friday press conference. “It’s a really big deal in that this is kind of like stage two of the process of figuring it out. We figured out camp, our guys did a marvelous job – all the people that contributed to the process in the procedure to get that done in camp was fantastic. Then we went on the road for the first time, there’s a ton of stuff that you got to go through to orchestrate that thing, and we orchestrated it to where we made it all the way to, here on Friday, with all negative tests again. So that’s a major accomplishment.”

Carroll was sure to caution that it is still very early on in the year and not the time to let the guards down. Road games will remain tough challenges with the number of people traveling and the logistics of the trips. After Sunday night, there are still 14 more games for Seattle in the 2020 regular season.

“We haven’t made through, everybody’s got to get to the first couple weeks on the road and at home to figure out their process and how it works and fits and all that,” Carroll continued. “But yeah, I think I’m surprised in general that there’s so few positive tests happening around the league with all the people that are testing. It does show you, though, that the focus of testing every day has really brought our attention to the details that it takes to pull this off, and I think that’s a big part of it.”

The Seahawks will square off against the Patriots at home Week 2 with no fans in the stands, just another way to keep everyone healthy. Seattle is hoping its streak of negative tests (and wins!) continues on Sunday.

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Auburn University continues to see rise in COVID-19 cases

The weekly count of COVID-19 cases has risen on Auburn University’s campus for the fourth straight week.

The weekly count of COVID-19 cases continues to rise on Auburn University’s campus.

Prior to classess starting on Aug. 17, Auburn reported 41 new student cases, 202 during the first week of classes and 490 two weeks ago, Auburn reported 577 positive student cases last week prior to Labor Day weekend.

Eleven employees (which includes faculty and staff) also tested positive, as did 10 students at the Auburn University Regional Airport. In total, the school reported 598 new cases.

Auburn also changed how they are calculating that number was calculated. This week, the number of positive cases were only self-reported positives from any testing site, as well as the university’s GuideSafe sentinel testing program. Prieviously, it counted every student and employee positive result from tests conducted at the Auburn University Medical Clinic, as well as any self-reported positives from other testing sites.

The sentinel program, which launched a pilot program last Wednesday, Sept. 2, will fully launch Tuesday. The goal of the program is to test random members of the Auburn University campus (students and employees) to monitor the prevalence of COVID-19 within the community.

Saints running back Dwayne Washington entering Day 9 on COVID-19 list

New Orleans Saints running back Dwayne Washington has spent more than a week away from the team while on the NFL’s COVID-19 reserve list.

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The first three New Orleans Saints players to land on the NFL’s COVID-19 reserve list all returned to action within a few days, presumably due to false positive test results: neither linebacker Kaden Elliss, long snapper Zach Wood, nor wide receiver Deonte Harris spent much time away from the team.

That hasn’t been the case for running back Dwayne Washington. Washington has been sequestered within the COVID-19 protocol for nine days since being sidelined on Aug. 30. Per NFL testing rules, any players displaying symptoms for COVID-19 must wait 10 days since they first appeared as well as three days after they were last detected before they can return. For players who have not shown symptoms but tested positive, the 10-day wait is sufficient.

It’s fairly complicated, but the strategy has worked so far. Of the thousands of players tested in the NFL recently, just a handful have been listed on the COVID-19 reserve. Teams have done a great job of detecting infections and preventing them from spreading further. But the challenge is only going to increase once games start being played.

Washington will not count against the 53-man roster limit for the Saints while designated on COVID-19 reserve. When he is cleared for work, though, someone may have to be waived or released if the Saints decide to add him to the depth chart.

Hopefully this is nothing serious for Washington. We should get an update on his situation in the next few days. Here’s hoping for good news.

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Auburn has passed its first test of the 2020 season

Every season in college football is full of challenges and over the past week Auburn overcame perhaps their toughest to date. 

Every season in college football is full of challenges and over the past week Auburn overcame perhaps its toughest to date.

After nine players tested positive for COVID-19 and another seven were sidelined due to contract tracing, Auburn was forced to cancel two practices last week. Since then the team underwent two rounds of testing and had no new positives, Auburn head coach Gus Malzahn reported Saturday.

The news came just after the Tigers scrimmage, something they may have not taken place had they been able to limit the spread.

“It was really great news,” Malzahn said. “I know our players were excited about it.”

Prior to the return of the student body Auburn was able to limit expose in a semi-bubble, but with the start of the semester on Aug. 17 there have been more positives.

“It’s kind of about adjusting,” Malzahn said. “The first two weeks we didn’t adjust to the students being back. The third week we did. Hopefully that will be the routine, knowing how we need to handle that situation and be accountable to each other. That’s been our message. Hopefully, this week will be the same.”

The Tigers are just three weeks away from their season opener with Kentucky on Sept. 26.

“Very relieved,” Malzahn added. “You are talking about we had two tough weeks as far as positives go. The urgency is the closer you get to the season. A lot of them are starters. We just need to get our guys on the practice field as a unit. It was great news.”

SMU-TCU becomes first Big 12 game postponed due to COVID-19

The SMU-TCU game becomes the first Big 12 game to be cancelled due to COVID-19. The Big 12 also announced roster guidelines.

By now you have probably already heard the news. The Southern Methodist and Texas Christian football game has been postponed due to COVID-19 testing. TCU announced the postponement on Friday.

Texas Christian’s Director of Intercollegiate Athletics Jeremiah Donati released the following statement.

We are are disappointed to announce that our upcoming football game against SMU will not be played as scheduled on September 11. We have agreed with SMU to monitor dates throughout the season to potentially make up the game.

In the course of following CDC guidelines and our aggressive testing and contact tracing strategy, we discovered that some student-athletes and support staff in our football program have tested positive for COVID-19. Those individuals were notified immediately and currently abiding by CDC protocols.

No one is currently facing serious health issues, and we intend to continue our enforcement of strict standards to protect the program and our community. Everyone’s health and safety remains our top priority. We share in your disappointment, but firmly believe we will be ready to resume football activities soon. We will continue to follow prevention and testing protocols and look forward to our Big 12 Conference opener against Iowa State on September 26.

Commissioner Bob Bowlsby stated numerous times when speaking to the media that there would be interruptions. What was unsure were how they would determine when to postpone or cancel a game.

KVUE reporter Jake Garcia tweeted out the thresholds for football cancellations.

TCU is set to visit Austin on Oct. 3 in the Longhorns Big 12 home opener. The Frogs defeated Texas last season in Fort Worth 37-27.

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Transparency will be key if the college football season is to survive

If the season is to run its course schools must be accountable and transparent especially when it comes to sharing COVID-19 testing results.

After five months of uncertainty and varying degrees of doubt toward the probability of a college football season this fall, the 2020 season officially started last Saturday with an FCS matchup between Central Arkansas and Austin Peay.

The Bears beat the Governors 24-17, and despite concerns about the game being a vector for the novel coronavirus, 82 Central Arkansas players, coaches and staff were tested the following week with none returning positive results.

UAB opened the FBS season against the Bears on Thursday night, and no one from either team tested positive ahead of the matchup.

This is a welcome good sign after months of bad ones. Of course, it’s still a small sample size, and we still don’t know how feasible a college football season will be once it’s in its full swing, but at the very least, the preliminary result seems to have been a good one.

However, if the season is to run its course, schools must be accountable and transparent, especially when it comes to testing results. And unfortunately, the early returns from the Power Five are mixed, to say the least.

In an ESPN survey of the 65 Power Five programs, nearly half of them refused to disclose information about the number of athletes that have tested positive for COVID-19. Further, a third also withheld information about testing protocols for players.

Of these schools, 21 are from the SEC, Big 12 and ACC, which are planning to participate in the fall season. Ten are from the SEC, eight are from the ACC (including Florida State and Miami) and the remaining three are from the Big 12.

Florida is one of just four SEC schools to respond to the survey with data on both the number of players who tested positive and the number who received tests overall.

Throughout the entire Gators athletic department, 569 athletes have been tested with only 35, or 6.2 percent, returning positive results.

Natalie Dean, a biostatistician and assistant professor at the University of Florida College of Public Health and Health Professions, told ESPN that openness about athlete testing results is critical to the viability of the sport.

“These teams are interacting closely. You can’t do socially distanced football. It’s a different set of risks than kids coming back to their classrooms and taking their classes,” she said. “It also informs decisions about whether schools should be playing against each other, because there’s interaction that way. It’s just a different set of considerations.”

Only 10 schools responded to all survey questions, and of those, just four — Clemson, Iowa State, Missouri and Oklahoma — are planning on playing football in the fall.

Greg McGarity, the athletics director at Georgia (which is among the schools to withhold both testing numbers and positive results from ESPN) gave a justification for the school’s actions.

“We’ve just followed our university protocols when we do have positive tests, whether they be staff, student-athletes or what have you,” said Greg McGarity, athletics director at Georgia, one of the schools that declined to answer any of the nine survey questions. “They’re reported through the university channels, and everything is done by the book.”

Though I would certainly like to take McGarity at his word that “everything is done by the book,” without proper accountability, it’s hard to.

Especially when you consider attempts made by public universities to cover up outbreaks within the general student body.

Often, universities cite federal privacy laws such as HIPPA and FERPA to avoid revealing testing information. However, legal experts say this is a misinterpretation of these laws, and it is permissible to disclose positive test results as long as general privacy standards are adhered to.

Essentially, universities are worried about the bad PR that would come from revealing outbreaks, within or without the athletic department. They want to avoid becoming scapegoats.

And this instinct is understandable. But Dean explains here succinctly why it’s harmful.

“Places worry that they’re going to be on the front page of the news. That discourages them from being transparent,” Dean said. “But that’s putting those patrons and employees and athletes at an elevated risk.”

Admittedly, the college football season happening this fall for more than a week or two feels much more likely than it did a month ago, when the Big Ten and Pac-12 canceled their fall seasons.

But a lack of accountability threatens that. And if you want to see players suit up for the fall season, you should demand openness from these institutions.

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Pac-12 to implement daily COVID-19 testing that ‘is a major step toward the safe return of sport competition’

Yesterday the Pac-12 conference announced that it has entered an agreement with healthcare manufacturer Quidel “to implement…

Yesterday the Pac-12 conference announced that it has entered an agreement with healthcare manufacturer Quidel “to implement up to daily testing for COVID-19 with student-athletes across all of its campuses for all close-contact sports.”

Constant and rapid testing being one of the main roadblocks towards the Big Ten and Pac-12 returning to play football, this news is massive for each conference’s return to sports and other athletic activity.

Big picture this situation also allows businesses, schools and more to see what happens when testing like this is done to a large asymptomatic group like a football team and then implement similar practices in their respective domains.

Everything about this sheds positive light on the path forward both in college athletics and in our country.

After the announcement yesterday Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott held a press conference and discussed what this breakthrough means for the conference and what the timeline towards playing looks like.

Here are some quotes that stuck out:

 

On the breakthrough being a major step towards playing:

 

On the overall importance:

 

Quidel president on what this “study” can do for the rest of the country:

 

A look forward at the timeline of when the conference will return to competition:

 

And, finally, Scott’s comment that the conference is trying to align their football season with the Big Ten:

 

Let’s focus on the last quote for a second and recognize the difference between the Big Ten and the Pac-12.

The Pac-12 found a testing breakthrough and held a press conference during which the commissioner was open, honest and clear about what it means and the path forward.

The Big Ten needed a lawsuit to force information out that there was indeed a vote between the presidents to postpone the season.

Notice the difference?

Anyway, the two conferences aligning their seasons makes sense at this point as it is looking increasingly unlikely that either will suit up this fall. It isn’t ideal, but a spring Rose Bowl game wouldn’t be the worst consolation prize.

Overall, though, this is tremendous news for the return of Big Ten and Pac-12 athletics as well as for our country as a whole. Maybe they still won’t play until the 2021 calendar year, but it’s clear they’re at least on the right track.

 

Stay tuned to BadgersWire as we follow everything surrounding the Big Ten’s plan and process towards returning to play football.

Catholics vs. COVID: 2 Notre Dame players positive in latest testing rounds

Notre Dame football players went through two rounds of COVID-19 testing this week with 99% of tests coming back negative.

The University of Notre Dame athletic department has released the latest results of this weeks COVID-19 tests administered to the football team with two positive tests being recorded of the 206 that were given.

Based off of the numbers it would appear the team was tested twice in this time.

The release states that the two players who tested positive have been placed in isolation and their parents have been informed and that through contact tracing, two additional athletes have been placed in quarantine.

Since testing began on June 18 that brings the total positive tests related to the Notre Dame football program to 11, with the total negative test rate now coming in at 99%.

Related:  Projecting Notre Dame’s 2020 Starting Lineup

Report: One Sooners position group wiped out by COVID test

According to report from the Athletic’s Jason Kersey, one position group has been wiped out due to one COVID-19 test.

The college football season is fast approaching and the Red River Rivalry on October 10th will be here before you know it. One of the big factors of the upcoming season is going to be how do they handle positive tests? Recently in his media session head coach Tom Herman stated they had zero positive COVID-19 tests. However, the Oklahoma Sooners haven’t been so lucky.

Following a return to campus, reports surfaced and later confirmed by head coach Lincoln Riley that they had nine cases. A report from Jason Kersey of the Athletic, that one position group was all but wiped out by one COVID-19 test. While he didn’t reveal which group, that is a big deal while the Big 12 Conference is attempting to play football this season.

The Big 12 and Oklahoma are set to kick off the season on Sept. 12th. That is just over two weeks away. The Longhorns players such as Sam Ehlinger have raved about how the school has gone about business in terms of keeping student-athletes safe during camp.

The situation will be monitored as more details are provided.

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Seahawks season opener in Atlanta will be played without fans in stands

The Seattle Seahawks 2020 season opener in Atlanta against the Falcons will be played without fans in the stadium due to the coronavirus.

The Seattle Seahawks are scheduled to open their regular season Sept. 13 on the road in Atlanta against the Falcons. The matchup will be played without a single fan in the stadium.

The Falcons announced Monday afternoon that all games scheduled at Mercedes-Benz Stadium will be played without fans through September 2020.

“The health and safety of our fans is our top priority,” Steve Cannon, CEO of AMB Sports and Entertainment said via the press release. “As much as we want to bring our Falcons and Atlanta United fans together at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, their safety and wellbeing, and that of our associates, the competitors, officials and game staff, and our community as a whole will always come first.

“After thoughtful consideration and collaboration, it became clear to us that adhering to the guidance by national and local health officials was the right decision.”

The Falcons are scheduled to play two home games in September – the first against the Seahawks and the second Sept. 27 against the Bears.

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