There are essentially four problems, as I see it:Furmanoid wrote: ↑Mon Aug 17, 2020 12:08 pmThey do take it seriously. That’s why they do screenings. There are several viruses that cause myocarditis including flu and adenovirus (bronchitis). While it usually resolves on its own without even being diagnosed, Myocarditis is estimated to be responsible for 20% of sudden cardiac death in athletes. The problem is not new. I wouldn’t be surprised if it killed Phiddipedes. SCHSL requires all coaches to train in sudden cardiac death. The “good” thing about Covid is that it has brought attention to this problem. If you have a bad bout with a virus, you should get screened or take it easy for several weeks before going back to your full workout. If the protocols in use are not sufficient to mitigate myocarditis risk to acceptable levels, then it follows logically that sports should be shut down for good since flu and other viruses definitely cause fatal cases in athletes.The Jackal wrote: ↑Mon Aug 17, 2020 11:51 amLet me ask you this -Furmanoid wrote: ↑Mon Aug 17, 2020 10:45 amHow many kids in that picture will be tested 2 or 3 times this week? Would that not make them safer? If they do get mild Covid, will they get the cardiac screening athletes have been getting for 2 months now? How many are at risk of being kicked out of their favorite activity and possibly losing a scholarship for being in the bars?
If there is a virus that requires cardiac screenings for college students, isn't that a good enough reason for a school to take it seriously?
1) Isolation - Colleges cannot really isolate or quarantine athletes. Professional organizations can - they play sports for a living. Taking a student out of the college environment/classes only because he or she is an athlete sort of takes the "student" out of the "athlete."
2) Testing - Can smaller schools afford to do as much testing as larger universities? Some argue that the wealth gap is pretty apparent here:
3) Quarantine - What do you do if a player/coach tests positive? In the MLB, they will shut down an entire team and postpone games to complete further testing and contact tracing, as occurred with the Cincinnati Reds this weekend. If professional sports organizations will shut down everything for a single positive test, how does a college football team (with well over 100 players) handle that? How would they handle it during the season? You can't just postpone the game and make it up with a double header.
4) Other Team's Compliance - At some point, every program is at the mercy of complete buy in from everyone. Take Liberty, whose coach just announced their program had not been testing because no players were symptomatic. The ACC programs with Liberty on the schedule, predictably, flipped out. If you can't trust your opponent to get with the program, you can't play them.
JohnKX512 liked this