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The Covid Effect
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CrimsonPhantom Offline
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Post: #61
RE: The Covid Effect


Quote:“Higher education, I don’t have the same authority over the collegiate sport associations and their requirements,” said Lujan Grisham. “My hope is, and we will direct the Higher Education Department to ask (the state’s university) regents and those higher education collegiate athletic organizations to adhere to our contactless sports requirements that we’re doing in K-12 and that we strongly advise that they postpone their seasons.”

Both universities would, in fact, have to adhere to any state health orders the governor put in place, including mass gatherings and activities, on their public campuses.

NMSU athletic director Mario Moccia was aware of the governor’s remarks and decided to hold off on reaction to them until talking with university leadership. He and UNM Athletic Director Eddie Nuñez are overseeing their school’s return-to-campus measures that including COVID-19 testing of all athletes wanting to take part in voluntary summer activities.

https://www.abqjournal.com/1474309/prep-...1594336600
(This post was last modified: 07-10-2020 12:31 PM by CrimsonPhantom.)
07-10-2020 12:25 PM
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wisdomgymrat Offline
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Post: #62
RE: The Covid Effect
The hammer is about to fall on the football season... get ready
07-10-2020 12:31 PM
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RobtheAggie Offline
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Post: #63
RE: The Covid Effect
I think no just football, but all fall sports. Basketball will be effected as well. I am generally an optimist, but not this time. I would love to be proven wrong though.
07-10-2020 04:03 PM
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Itinerant Texan Offline
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Post: #64
RE: The Covid Effect
As I suspected they would, the dominos are beginning to fall. We can probably kiss that highly anticipated BCG return to A&M goodbye, and again, how is NMSU gonna pay for their other sports with no BCS payout? Their UCLA payday just left the building. We're in for a wild ride folks!

https://www.espn.com/college-sports/stor...all-sports
07-10-2020 06:49 PM
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Country_Wisdom_359 Offline
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Post: #65
RE: The Covid Effect
Well... I bet regionally some schools will try and push forward. Out here in the southeast county mayors refuse to issue face mask orders and have said schools start on time as usual with no restrictions and no required masks for staff or students. Football? It’s king in the south. High school ball starts 9/1. Delayed by about a month.

Tuscaloosa is set to lose $1 billion if the Tide don’t fill up the stands and the fans can’t sing Dixieland Delight (if you haven’t seen the crowd singing along and adding the ahhh... choice language in between lines, you really should YouTube it). Saben’s $10 million salary isn’t going to be picked up by the boosters alone.

Maybe a regional exhibition season? I don’t know. Basketball wasn’t as big of a deal down here but try canceling football. Please don’t get me wrong. I’m ALL about player and fan safety and unlike many of my local brethren, I don’t believe the virus is a conspiracy to take away our freedom. Too many athletes are getting the virus. That means the team had to quarantine for 14 days. Hard to see a season working out with rules like this in place.
07-10-2020 06:58 PM
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SoCalBobcat78 Online
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Post: #66
RE: The Covid Effect
The UCLA game has been canceled, which sucks for both UCLA and NMSU. Gone is a much needed opening day win for UCLA and a much needed $1.3 million payday for NMSU. The mismanagement of this Covid-19 crisis has been ridiculous. New Mexico State football may lose the bulk of their schedule and a ton of revenue. I am hoping that Texas State keeps their game with NMSU. I was planning on going to the UCLA-NMSU game at the Rose Bowl. So much for that idea...
07-10-2020 08:12 PM
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Vulpes88 Offline
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Post: #67
RE: The Covid Effect
(07-10-2020 06:58 PM)Country_Wisdom_359 Wrote:  Well... I bet regionally some schools will try and push forward. Out here in the southeast county mayors refuse to issue face mask orders and have said schools start on time as usual with no restrictions and no required masks for staff or students. Football? It’s king in the south. High school ball starts 9/1. Delayed by about a month.

Tuscaloosa is set to lose $1 billion if the Tide don’t fill up the stands and the fans can’t sing Dixieland Delight (if you haven’t seen the crowd singing along and adding the ahhh... choice language in between lines, you really should YouTube it). Saben’s $10 million salary isn’t going to be picked up by the boosters alone.

Maybe a regional exhibition season? I don’t know. Basketball wasn’t as big of a deal down here but try canceling football. Please don’t get me wrong. I’m ALL about player and fan safety and unlike many of my local brethren, I don’t believe the virus is a conspiracy to take away our freedom. Too many athletes are getting the virus. That means the team had to quarantine for 14 days. Hard to see a season working out with rules like this in place.

For football could have conference only gamess across the board. As for basketball, I have no idea. Still risky. One kid tests positive there's two games missed and who knows how many potential cases.
07-11-2020 09:23 AM
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Itinerant Texan Offline
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RE: The Covid Effect
07-14-2020 08:37 PM
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CrimsonPhantom Offline
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Post: #69
RE: The Covid Effect
(07-14-2020 08:37 PM)Itinerant Texan Wrote:  Wow.

https://www.espn.com/espn/story/_/id/294...games-2020

Patriots plan to allow 20% at their games.
07-15-2020 11:20 AM
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Itinerant Texan Offline
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Post: #70
RE: The Covid Effect
WAC announces decision regarding fall competition

https://tarletonsports.com/news/2020/7/1...ition.aspx
07-15-2020 09:42 PM
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Hilldog Offline
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Post: #71
RE: The Covid Effect
I've read many schools have lost most of their SID staff. So, instead of a four person SID office, there are now only two full timers, and the rest will be done by student assistants.
07-17-2020 04:08 PM
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Itinerant Texan Offline
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Post: #72
RE: The Covid Effect
(07-17-2020 04:08 PM)Hilldog Wrote:  I've read many schools have lost most of their SID staff. So, instead of a four person SID office, there are now only two full timers, and the rest will be done by student assistants.

SID staff, huh? 07-coffee3
07-17-2020 11:42 PM
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CrimsonPhantom Offline
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RE: The Covid Effect
Quote:Citing the rise of positive COVID-19 cases among young people in the state, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham on Tuesday sent a letter to the leadership of the University of New Mexico and New Mexico State University strongly urging both to suspend contact sports this fall, including football and soccer.

In the letter reviewed Tuesday by the Journal, Lujan Grisham, who earlier this month ordered the New Mexico Activities Association to postpone all fall contact sports at the high school level until 2021, is now urging the governor-appointed regents and university leadership at UNM and NMSU to take similar steps. The letter states it is “critical that you postpone collegiate athletics in this moment of escalating danger,” saying there is potential they could be resumed in late 2020 or early 2021.

“I know what I am asking you to contemplate is difficult and unprecedented, but these are difficult and unprecedented times,” Lujan Grisham wrote. “Fighting COVID-19 is a team sport. I am asking each of you to join me and take it upon yourselves to do everything you can to fight COVID-19. Together we can protect all New Mexicans, and if we are successful, we can resume contact sports and re-engage in the camaraderie and joy they bring all of us in a safe manner as soon as we can.”

The letter didn’t make clear if the governor wants both schools to suspend immediately any ongoing offseason workouts.

The letter also stressed that the number of young people with the virus has spiked in New Mexico, and that while it rarely causes death in that age group, it can cause long-lasting harm.

Both UNM and NMSU said while they plan to continue working closely with the governor to put the health and safety of students first, neither has yet made a final decision on the governor’s request.

Meanwhile, the letter was sent on a day the Journal learned that New Mexico United, the state’s professional soccer team based in Albuquerque, with the governor’s knowledge, has been practicing despite having played two out-of-state matches since July 11. That would seem to be out of the question according to the Governor’s Executive Order requiring a 14-day travel quarantine for anyone entering the state.

The executive order mandating the 14-day travel quarantine allows for people to leave quarantine only for medical purposes, which United majority owner Peter Trevisani says his team is doing.

“The thing about our players is if they aren’t out training or getting some kind of care between their matches, they risk serious or even catastrophic type of injuries in a game,” said Trevisani.

Trevisani, who is on the governor’s Economic Recovery Council helping map out the state’s reopening amid the pandemic, acknowledged people might question whether his team was getting special treatment, but emphasized that is not the case.

The governor’s office has said it is aware of the stringent league-mandated health guidelines United is undergoing with its core travel group of about 25 players, coaches and staff members who are staying in their own bubble of sorts that includes mandatory weekly COVID-19 testing and numerous other restrictions.

The team, Trevisani said, is either training, playing or traveling in controlled groups, “Otherwise they’re in their rooms, not getting coffee. They’re socially distanced or isolated. And I think it’s working. We’ve been in this bubble for well over a month now, maybe two. We haven’t had a positive test yet.”

Tripp Stelnicki, a spokesman for the governor, said Lujan Grisham is aware United has been training upon return to Albuquerque from past out-of-state matches and that the state is not “considering any special exemptions, but certainly the hope is to find a way to ensure United can continue to operate safely and in line with the state’s public health requirements to keep players, families, trainers and others associated with the team – and of course the broader community and state – as safe as possible.”

At a news conference on July 9, the governor said United would likely not be playing games in New Mexico this season. Its first home game, scheduled next week, has been moved to September.

Her letter to the universities said “sports, especially contact sports, are unsafe at this point in time.”

The governor’s letter states COVID-19 cases in New Mexico among 20- to 39-year-olds are rising, and while that age group might not be dying from the virus at a high rate, “their bodies are too often indelibly harmed, forever scarred” as a result.

“It is therefore critical that you postpone collegiate athletics in this moment of escalating danger,” Lujan Grisham wrote. “This is an essential step we must take if we are to return to some safe and balanced new normal as quickly as possible.”

Both UNM and NMSU have yet to say they will adhere to the governor’s request and both have prior contractual agreements that are tied in with multi-million dollar television deals and previously agreed to football games.

UNM offered the Journal a joint statement from UNM President Garnett Stokes and UNM Athletic Director Eddie Nuñez that read:

“The health and well-being of our student athletes and our Lobo community is, first and foremost, our top consideration in how we approach our fall athletic programs. Equally important is ensuring student academic success. We have been in regular communication with the Governor’s office over the past several months, and we sincerely appreciate the guidance her office has provided as we have worked on our plans for fall sports. We expect discussions with the NCAA and the Mountain West Conference to continue over the next couple of weeks as plans for the fall are finalized.”

Similarly, NMSU said it is still deciding how to proceed with what the letter requested and how that will affect their fall semester.

“We are actively monitoring this ever-changing landscape with regard to intercollegiate athletics and following the decisions being made by the NCAA, the conferences, and other associated bodies,” wrote a university spokesman in an email. “We are also in continuous conversation with health experts in the state and on our campus. While we have not yet made any decisions with regard to altering our fall schedule, our commitment is to do what’s best for our student athletes and our programs.”

Link
07-22-2020 05:47 PM
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Nittany_Bearcat Offline
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Post: #74
RE: The Covid Effect
(07-22-2020 05:47 PM)CrimsonPhantom Wrote:  
Quote:Citing the rise of positive COVID-19 cases among young people in the state, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham on Tuesday sent a letter to the leadership of the University of New Mexico and New Mexico State University strongly urging both to suspend contact sports this fall, including football and soccer.

In the letter reviewed Tuesday by the Journal, Lujan Grisham, who earlier this month ordered the New Mexico Activities Association to postpone all fall contact sports at the high school level until 2021, is now urging the governor-appointed regents and university leadership at UNM and NMSU to take similar steps. The letter states it is “critical that you postpone collegiate athletics in this moment of escalating danger,” saying there is potential they could be resumed in late 2020 or early 2021.

“I know what I am asking you to contemplate is difficult and unprecedented, but these are difficult and unprecedented times,” Lujan Grisham wrote. “Fighting COVID-19 is a team sport. I am asking each of you to join me and take it upon yourselves to do everything you can to fight COVID-19. Together we can protect all New Mexicans, and if we are successful, we can resume contact sports and re-engage in the camaraderie and joy they bring all of us in a safe manner as soon as we can.”

The letter didn’t make clear if the governor wants both schools to suspend immediately any ongoing offseason workouts.

The letter also stressed that the number of young people with the virus has spiked in New Mexico, and that while it rarely causes death in that age group, it can cause long-lasting harm.

Both UNM and NMSU said while they plan to continue working closely with the governor to put the health and safety of students first, neither has yet made a final decision on the governor’s request.

Meanwhile, the letter was sent on a day the Journal learned that New Mexico United, the state’s professional soccer team based in Albuquerque, with the governor’s knowledge, has been practicing despite having played two out-of-state matches since July 11. That would seem to be out of the question according to the Governor’s Executive Order requiring a 14-day travel quarantine for anyone entering the state.

The executive order mandating the 14-day travel quarantine allows for people to leave quarantine only for medical purposes, which United majority owner Peter Trevisani says his team is doing.

“The thing about our players is if they aren’t out training or getting some kind of care between their matches, they risk serious or even catastrophic type of injuries in a game,” said Trevisani.

Trevisani, who is on the governor’s Economic Recovery Council helping map out the state’s reopening amid the pandemic, acknowledged people might question whether his team was getting special treatment, but emphasized that is not the case.

The governor’s office has said it is aware of the stringent league-mandated health guidelines United is undergoing with its core travel group of about 25 players, coaches and staff members who are staying in their own bubble of sorts that includes mandatory weekly COVID-19 testing and numerous other restrictions.

The team, Trevisani said, is either training, playing or traveling in controlled groups, “Otherwise they’re in their rooms, not getting coffee. They’re socially distanced or isolated. And I think it’s working. We’ve been in this bubble for well over a month now, maybe two. We haven’t had a positive test yet.”

Tripp Stelnicki, a spokesman for the governor, said Lujan Grisham is aware United has been training upon return to Albuquerque from past out-of-state matches and that the state is not “considering any special exemptions, but certainly the hope is to find a way to ensure United can continue to operate safely and in line with the state’s public health requirements to keep players, families, trainers and others associated with the team – and of course the broader community and state – as safe as possible.”

At a news conference on July 9, the governor said United would likely not be playing games in New Mexico this season. Its first home game, scheduled next week, has been moved to September.

Her letter to the universities said “sports, especially contact sports, are unsafe at this point in time.”

The governor’s letter states COVID-19 cases in New Mexico among 20- to 39-year-olds are rising, and while that age group might not be dying from the virus at a high rate, “their bodies are too often indelibly harmed, forever scarred” as a result.

“It is therefore critical that you postpone collegiate athletics in this moment of escalating danger,” Lujan Grisham wrote. “This is an essential step we must take if we are to return to some safe and balanced new normal as quickly as possible.”

Both UNM and NMSU have yet to say they will adhere to the governor’s request and both have prior contractual agreements that are tied in with multi-million dollar television deals and previously agreed to football games.

UNM offered the Journal a joint statement from UNM President Garnett Stokes and UNM Athletic Director Eddie Nuñez that read:

“The health and well-being of our student athletes and our Lobo community is, first and foremost, our top consideration in how we approach our fall athletic programs. Equally important is ensuring student academic success. We have been in regular communication with the Governor’s office over the past several months, and we sincerely appreciate the guidance her office has provided as we have worked on our plans for fall sports. We expect discussions with the NCAA and the Mountain West Conference to continue over the next couple of weeks as plans for the fall are finalized.”

Similarly, NMSU said it is still deciding how to proceed with what the letter requested and how that will affect their fall semester.

“We are actively monitoring this ever-changing landscape with regard to intercollegiate athletics and following the decisions being made by the NCAA, the conferences, and other associated bodies,” wrote a university spokesman in an email. “We are also in continuous conversation with health experts in the state and on our campus. While we have not yet made any decisions with regard to altering our fall schedule, our commitment is to do what’s best for our student athletes and our programs.”

Link

Grisham disappoints me.

NMSU football isn't essential - NO college football program is essential. But it is a positive for the University, in terms of an experience for the students, bringing in $ for other sports, and positive PR for the program during a season like 2017.

All that should be considered against the number of incremental CoronaVirus cases is likely to induce in the state of New Mexico. I'd argue that number of incremental (key word: incremental) cases is minimal. New Mexico will not suffer massive deaths because NMSU is playing football against schools from Texas, Alabama, Ohio, Louisiana or Florida in 2020.

Frankly, there are probably hundreds of people from each of those states who enter/leave New Mexico on a daily basis. What further affect could 100 people (a football travelling squad) participating in a game once every 7 days have?

I really hope NMSU plays football in 2020, gets through the year, and thrives going forward. I fear that if there is no NMSU football in 2020, there may be no NMSU football in 2021 or beyond either. Grisham just doesn't understand any of that, I fear.
07-23-2020 11:44 PM
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RE: The Covid Effect
(07-23-2020 11:44 PM)Nittany_Bearcat Wrote:  
(07-22-2020 05:47 PM)CrimsonPhantom Wrote:  
Quote:Citing the rise of positive COVID-19 cases among young people in the state, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham on Tuesday sent a letter to the leadership of the University of New Mexico and New Mexico State University strongly urging both to suspend contact sports this fall, including football and soccer.

In the letter reviewed Tuesday by the Journal, Lujan Grisham, who earlier this month ordered the New Mexico Activities Association to postpone all fall contact sports at the high school level until 2021, is now urging the governor-appointed regents and university leadership at UNM and NMSU to take similar steps. The letter states it is “critical that you postpone collegiate athletics in this moment of escalating danger,” saying there is potential they could be resumed in late 2020 or early 2021.

“I know what I am asking you to contemplate is difficult and unprecedented, but these are difficult and unprecedented times,” Lujan Grisham wrote. “Fighting COVID-19 is a team sport. I am asking each of you to join me and take it upon yourselves to do everything you can to fight COVID-19. Together we can protect all New Mexicans, and if we are successful, we can resume contact sports and re-engage in the camaraderie and joy they bring all of us in a safe manner as soon as we can.”

The letter didn’t make clear if the governor wants both schools to suspend immediately any ongoing offseason workouts.

The letter also stressed that the number of young people with the virus has spiked in New Mexico, and that while it rarely causes death in that age group, it can cause long-lasting harm.

Both UNM and NMSU said while they plan to continue working closely with the governor to put the health and safety of students first, neither has yet made a final decision on the governor’s request.

Meanwhile, the letter was sent on a day the Journal learned that New Mexico United, the state’s professional soccer team based in Albuquerque, with the governor’s knowledge, has been practicing despite having played two out-of-state matches since July 11. That would seem to be out of the question according to the Governor’s Executive Order requiring a 14-day travel quarantine for anyone entering the state.

The executive order mandating the 14-day travel quarantine allows for people to leave quarantine only for medical purposes, which United majority owner Peter Trevisani says his team is doing.

“The thing about our players is if they aren’t out training or getting some kind of care between their matches, they risk serious or even catastrophic type of injuries in a game,” said Trevisani.

Trevisani, who is on the governor’s Economic Recovery Council helping map out the state’s reopening amid the pandemic, acknowledged people might question whether his team was getting special treatment, but emphasized that is not the case.

The governor’s office has said it is aware of the stringent league-mandated health guidelines United is undergoing with its core travel group of about 25 players, coaches and staff members who are staying in their own bubble of sorts that includes mandatory weekly COVID-19 testing and numerous other restrictions.

The team, Trevisani said, is either training, playing or traveling in controlled groups, “Otherwise they’re in their rooms, not getting coffee. They’re socially distanced or isolated. And I think it’s working. We’ve been in this bubble for well over a month now, maybe two. We haven’t had a positive test yet.”

Tripp Stelnicki, a spokesman for the governor, said Lujan Grisham is aware United has been training upon return to Albuquerque from past out-of-state matches and that the state is not “considering any special exemptions, but certainly the hope is to find a way to ensure United can continue to operate safely and in line with the state’s public health requirements to keep players, families, trainers and others associated with the team – and of course the broader community and state – as safe as possible.”

At a news conference on July 9, the governor said United would likely not be playing games in New Mexico this season. Its first home game, scheduled next week, has been moved to September.

Her letter to the universities said “sports, especially contact sports, are unsafe at this point in time.”

The governor’s letter states COVID-19 cases in New Mexico among 20- to 39-year-olds are rising, and while that age group might not be dying from the virus at a high rate, “their bodies are too often indelibly harmed, forever scarred” as a result.

“It is therefore critical that you postpone collegiate athletics in this moment of escalating danger,” Lujan Grisham wrote. “This is an essential step we must take if we are to return to some safe and balanced new normal as quickly as possible.”

Both UNM and NMSU have yet to say they will adhere to the governor’s request and both have prior contractual agreements that are tied in with multi-million dollar television deals and previously agreed to football games.

UNM offered the Journal a joint statement from UNM President Garnett Stokes and UNM Athletic Director Eddie Nuñez that read:

“The health and well-being of our student athletes and our Lobo community is, first and foremost, our top consideration in how we approach our fall athletic programs. Equally important is ensuring student academic success. We have been in regular communication with the Governor’s office over the past several months, and we sincerely appreciate the guidance her office has provided as we have worked on our plans for fall sports. We expect discussions with the NCAA and the Mountain West Conference to continue over the next couple of weeks as plans for the fall are finalized.”

Similarly, NMSU said it is still deciding how to proceed with what the letter requested and how that will affect their fall semester.

“We are actively monitoring this ever-changing landscape with regard to intercollegiate athletics and following the decisions being made by the NCAA, the conferences, and other associated bodies,” wrote a university spokesman in an email. “We are also in continuous conversation with health experts in the state and on our campus. While we have not yet made any decisions with regard to altering our fall schedule, our commitment is to do what’s best for our student athletes and our programs.”

Link

Grisham disappoints me.

NMSU football isn't essential - NO college football program is essential. But it is a positive for the University, in terms of an experience for the students, bringing in $ for other sports, and positive PR for the program during a season like 2017.

All that should be considered against the number of incremental CoronaVirus cases is likely to induce in the state of New Mexico. I'd argue that number of incremental (key word: incremental) cases is minimal. New Mexico will not suffer massive deaths because NMSU is playing football against schools from Texas, Alabama, Ohio, Louisiana or Florida in 2020.

Frankly, there are probably hundreds of people from each of those states who enter/leave New Mexico on a daily basis. What further affect could 100 people (a football travelling squad) participating in a game once every 7 days have?

I really hope NMSU plays football in 2020, gets through the year, and thrives going forward. I fear that if there is no NMSU football in 2020, there may be no NMSU football in 2021 or beyond either. Grisham just doesn't understand any of that, I fear.

Yeah, it kinda is. nmsu depends heavily upon P5 payouts to fund their other programs.
07-24-2020 05:57 PM
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SoCalBobcat78 Online
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Post: #76
RE: The Covid Effect
(07-23-2020 11:44 PM)Nittany_Bearcat Wrote:  Grisham disappoints me.

NMSU football isn't essential - NO college football program is essential. But it is a positive for the University, in terms of an experience for the students, bringing in $ for other sports, and positive PR for the program during a season like 2017.

All that should be considered against the number of incremental CoronaVirus cases is likely to induce in the state of New Mexico. I'd argue that number of incremental (key word: incremental) cases is minimal. New Mexico will not suffer massive deaths because NMSU is playing football against schools from Texas, Alabama, Ohio, Louisiana or Florida in 2020.

Frankly, there are probably hundreds of people from each of those states who enter/leave New Mexico on a daily basis. What further affect could 100 people (a football travelling squad) participating in a game once every 7 days have?

I really hope NMSU plays football in 2020, gets through the year, and thrives going forward. I fear that if there is no NMSU football in 2020, there may be no NMSU football in 2021 or beyond either. Grisham just doesn't understand any of that, I fear.

The NFL is going to play this season because they will be testing every day for the next five months. They are planning on testing players, coaches and other team personnel, a total of 120 daily tests. The total cost is an estimated at $75 million for 32 teams. They are also expanding practice squads to 16, which gives them additional players to bring up if a player tests positive. This is what it will take to play football in the fall. NMSU cannot afford to do that and these are students, not professional athletes.

Grisham is doing the right thing. There were 78,000 new Covid-19 cases yesterday in the country yesterday, a new daily record, and over 1,000 deaths, again. Japan, a country with 126 million people and the world's oldest population, has had a total of 992 deaths and a total of about 27,000 covid-19 cases. In just one day we blow by their total numbers. In this country, we have lost the battle with Covid-19. The pressure being put on the healthcare system is ridiculous and in order to help them, Governors like Grisham have to do whatever it takes to slow the spread.

By the way, I want college football this fall. I had planned on attending the NMSU vs UCLA at the Rose Bowl. There is no high school football in Southern California until December. College football may start in late September. Even all NFL preseason games were canceled. So this sucks and is a financial disaster for every school, not just NMSU.
07-25-2020 11:03 AM
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Post: #77
RE: The Covid Effect
"While some conferences have either scrapped their fall football season or gone to a conference-only schedule, Tom Burnett, who begins his 18th year as the Southland Conference Commissioner, said the league expects to play a full football schedule during the league’s virtual media day Wednesday via Zoom."

https://www.reporternews.com/story/sport...488288002/
07-25-2020 12:22 PM
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TardisCaptain Offline
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Post: #78
RE: The Covid Effect
Dixie State just lost a 2020 football game when the Pioneer League decided to go conference only.

https://fbschedules.com/pioneer-football...e-in-2020/

I wonder if NMSU or BYU would pick them up as a cheap home game?
07-27-2020 05:05 PM
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Itinerant Texan Offline
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I Root For: On Ye Tarleton!
Location: USA
Post: #79
RE: The Covid Effect
ACC sets 11 game schedule, includes Notre Dame

https://www.espn.com/college-football/st...notre-dame
07-29-2020 04:49 PM
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Itinerant Texan Offline
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Posts: 1,968
Joined: Apr 2020
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I Root For: On Ye Tarleton!
Location: USA
Post: #80
RE: The Covid Effect
SEC to play 10-game, conference-only football schedule in 2020

https://www.espn.com/college-football/st...l-schedule
07-30-2020 10:11 PM
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