Dont you bellieve the doctors?
Printable View
Did you read the article he linked? For example, there was a huge spike in people found dead in their homes in NYC over the last week or so. Few if any of those people were tested for it, but at least some (but likely many) of them were almost definitely caused by the pandemic.
https://www.espn.com/wwe/story/_/id/...ida-mayor-says
-wwe-deemed-essential-business-florida-mayor-says
I voted for winter... Nov - Jan. I don't think sports starts to happen, even without fans, until sufficient testing and contact tracing and testing can be implemented... whatever that means.:confused:
I read somewhere that until colleges open back up to students, that only student-athletes in school doesn't make sense. So if colleges don't open, no college sports. I think the first semester of the 2020-2021 year is gone...
Well... the maximum invasion of privacy as some would say, is full contact tracing... electronically with cell phones, etc, like what China has implemented with green,yellow,red status... not to mention HIPAA. I can't imagine the US public will go for that, not to mention the ACLU... so in addition to how much risk the public is ready for, the question may also come down to how much no-privacy the public is ready for.
As far as basketball goes, they could probably start in November if they put their minds to it. Antibody test the players, coaches, and refs. Admit nobody except these people and the scorers. The scorers have the whole stadium in which to socially distance themselves. Cameramen, but no sportswriters, would be allowed. Bilas would not be allowed, even if antibody positive. ;-)
All people who are to be admitted take their body temps twice daily and monitor symptoms throughout the season, and do not get to play if they are symptomatic or febrile.
After that, there is nothing left to do but have the ref toss up the ball and let em play!
From what I've read and studied, this is inaccurate. An overwhelming body of evidence suggests if a person dies of anything in NY right now and COVID can be found on the body, they are considered a COVID death...That has been all over the news the past few days and was confirmed by the state of NY. 2) please source this "dead at home" claim.
Also, when a vaccine becomes available, it's not like everyone will be able to get it on day one. Let's say we can vaccinate 1,000,000 per day, that would still take almost a full year before everyone is vaccinated. No one is really talking about this. People keep throwing out the 18 month number for vaccine availability, but if it is available in large amounts, people still have to line up to get it. I suppose we could use some sort of system like they do during a national election in which vaccinations are offered all over the place and people are willing to wait in line all day but that would assume a very large quantity of doses available.
Most of the votes in the poll are for, basically, 2020 football season or sooner, but this seems unrealistic to me. That looks like a recipe for getting five games in and then having to scuttle the whole season when the [probably larger] fall outbreak shifts from park to first to second gear.
This thread is for discussing sports in our viral world. General C-19 discussions are here.
-jk
Chris Fowler talked a bit about this today, and said a spring football season, starting in Feb, is "gaining momentum". He says he's been told the window to get a regular fall opening to campuses would close by late May (he dismisses the thought of starting sports with campuses still closed), which is obviously pretty soon given how much uncertainty still exists about COVID. He acknowledges this is "informed speculation",
https://www.al.com/sports/2020/04/co...-scenario.html
I'm sure Big Ten football games would be just delightful in February.
Since jk said this is more for the impact on sports I won't post the video here. But just watched a video of a doctor who said they were finding very interesting results of people showing antibodies after being sick as far back as December. I think they could have contracted it later and simply never shown symptoms. That's important, but when it was contracted doesn't matter to the overall numbers. He believes they may find potentially millions already with the antibodies and that would impact the mortality rate. While it's possible some death's due to the virus are being under reported as Steven linked to, I think as Kfanarmy pointed out some are being misreported as well. At the very least they may balance each other out? A difference of a thousand deaths, ten thousand even wouldn't affect the rate as much as finding millions already infected and recovered.
Again the important thing is the number of people who may already have the antibodies (if that turns out to be true) combined with the resulting declining mortality rate (just the rate lowering from more precise numbers, not a change in the virus's leathality) that would result would allow sports to start much sooner. Now we can argue about if it should even if that is true. We can argue about how it should be handled, perhaps with no spectators, things like that. But let's face it, there is so much money to be made in sports I imagine they will latch onto any reason to restart. Just considering the numbers.
The PGA has announced its schedule starting in mid-June. The golf part of it seems doable, but the traveling between cities is not going to be easy, even if things open up a fair amount. One would assume that they got some buy-in from players on this because if they schedule the tournaments and no one decides to show up, that is a big problem.
https://www.espn.com/golf/story/_/id...hwab-challenge
I'm not sure why you can't have PGA golf or tennis. You don't need fans there and easy to test participants. The golf courses in my city are full every day. A choice between nba horse on TV and a PGA tournament after being at home for 5 weeks?
Ratings would be through the roof. Same with tennis.
MLS has pushed their re-open date to at least June 8. For now.
One thing that I think the leagues need to consider even if there is a way to ramp up testing to the point that athletes can be tested every day is what happens when one player tests positive and then the whole team has to be quarantined? Even if the pie in the sky ideas of self-quarantined leagues are feasible, it is inevitable that with thousands of people involved from the players to the coaches to the staff, etc, that someone, somewhere will get sick. As of right now, the medical and scientific communities don't know how long it takes for a person to go from exposure to the virus to becoming sick or where in that process the person also becomes contagious. To avoid infecting the whole league, basically the entire team would suddenly be quarantined.
The ramifications of that are huge. Imagine if the NBA got its wish to play the playoffs in Vegas using the hotels to quarantine the players, staff, and families. But now imagine that Lebron tests positive and has to sit out for two weeks and the rest of the Lakers are forced to sit out until they test negative for the virus for x number of days in a row. Either the schedules would have to be incredibly flexible (which would require a longer period of isolation for everyone involved in the event) or the league would keep playing games and risk that the biggest match-ups of the season could happen without the biggest stars.