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Re: not everyone has access to LAT articles

April 09, 2020 12:54PM
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zn
My access ran out. You only get so much a month. I (and others I assume) would appreciate it if someone posted the whole artlcle. Thanks

Sorry. I had thought that the LA Times was providing free access to all of its coronavirus-related articles. I guess I was wrong. Anyways, here it is:

By BILL PLASCHKE COLUMNIST
APRIL 8, 20206:22 PM


The folks at Major League Baseball suggest restarting the sport while sheltering at home plate.

The officials of the NBA are discussing the use of a rapid-response testing device that would eschew load management for blood management.

A college football coach from Oklahoma State named Mike Gundy has proclaimed that, dad-gummit, his team is getting back to business on May 1?

We've got to get these guys back in here,Gundy told reporters in a teleconference this week. From what I read, the healthy people can fight this we all need to go back to work.

Like most segments of the population, the sports world indeed needs to go back to work, and with every day, it's understandable desperation is showing. Yet with every day, its solutions for a return sound sillier, and its false hope does more damage.

Ignore the leagues, mute the coaches, and listen to the science regarding COVID-19.

There is a realistic chance the sports world will be benched until 2021.

Since a development and widespread utilization of an effective coronavirus vaccine is probably many months away, and because serological testing of those who have immunity to the virus is at least several months away, the clock has seemingly run out on the current and upcoming seasons of this country's major sports.

You keep waiting for someone to say it ain't so, but all evidence says it's absolutely so.

The latest voice of realism comes from Dr. Jeffrey Smith, Santa Clara County executive officer, who addressed that county's Board of Supervisors on Tuesday in words that appeared in a Times' story by Rong-Gong Lin II.

Smith said he did not anticipate any sports games until at least Thanksgiving, and we'd be lucky to have them by Thanksgiving. This is not something that's going to be easy to do.

Smith came as close as anyone to saying what many have been dreading, but it's time to start accepting.

Just as everything else in our world has been inexorably altered, so, too, have sports. It's not invincible. It's not immune. It's never over until it's over, but this feels pretty much over.

The NBA is probably done. The Lakers' and Clippers' seasons are almost certainly ruined. Just look at the China Basketball Assn., which has already postponed a scheduled restart once and is now looking at a minimum four-month shutdown.

A similar delay would push the NBA season into September, which would risk ruining two seasons.

ESPN reported that the league is exploring returning to action through the use of rapid-response blood tests, but even if the efficacy of those tests is proven, why would NBA players be first in line over millions of others Americans eager to get back to work?

Baseball is also probably done. The Dodgers' status as World Series favorite has likely ended. The number of players and personnel involved in each game makes it more difficult to restart than basketball, and there's no way they could actually start a season in the winter.

There was talk this week of playing in virtual quarantine in Arizona, as if such widespread safety could be guaranteed, and as if players would actually agree to be away from their families for nearly five months. The notion was so vehemently shouted down by a disbelieving public that the league quickly put out a statement puncturing its trial balloon.

We have not sought or received approval of any plan from federal, state or local officials, the league stated, adding later, We are not ready at this time to endorse any particular format for staging games.

Football is also probably done, at least for this calendar year. The NFL can make headlines with free agency and its virtual draft, but none of those players will probably be allowed to hit the field until sometime in the late fall. College coaches can spout all they want about their kids being tougher than any lil' old virus, but they aren't.

The best case for football would seem to be a season that starts in January and runs through spring, for college and pros. Sounds drastic, but is that such a bad thing? That would work, right?

When looking for real optimism here, perhaps that is where we should train our eyes, on the potential excitement in sports' new realities.

Can you imagine a Super Bowl in April, maybe the week after baseball's opening day and the week before the Masters? Or how about a college football season that runs concurrently with college hoops, basketball being played during the week and football on weekends? What about a national championship football game on the Sunday in the middle of college's basketball's Final Four?

Then there's the fun of a reconfigured NBA schedule that, face it, already needed fixing. Start the season in January, play through August, and make that permanent. That's basically what at least one owner suggested before the pandemic.

The biggest hit in all of this would be taken by baseball, but there seems to be no solution to a lost season. The pandemic's timeline is mirroring the timeline of baseball's schedule. There appears to be no other outcome than to record 2020 as a shutout.

The economic impact of the long-term shuttering of sports is tremendous, and will be fought by officials from baseline to baseline, but on this field, science owns the scoreboard.

Listen now to Dr. Neal ElAttrache, the renowned team physician of the Dodgers and Rams, who admits it's going to be tough. I do think it's medically feasible that you could reopen the three sports this year, he said. But to have any sort of normal fan experience would be extremely difficult, if not impossible.

Like other scientists, ElAttrache said that for the sports world to return with fans, it would require a vaccine. But I think you're talking about well into the fall until you can widely disseminate a vaccine, he said.

In the meantime, he said it's possible for the players to return if they have access to antibodies tests that can determine if someone is immune to COVID-19. Yet the serological testing has not yet been widely approved by the Food and Drug Administration.

That's the bridge to the vaccine, that's the key, said ElAttrache. To make those tests widely available, that's absolutely critically necessary to play this year.

That's a longshot and, again, even if those tests are suddenly available, why should athletes get priority?

Sports will eventually be back, but this country is facing much more important issues right now. Cradle your glove, wear your jersey, enjoy the replays, and wait till next year.

LA Times



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 04/09/2020 01:31PM by ramBRO.
SubjectAuthorViewsPosted

  Sports Illustrated: Coronavirus vs College Football

MamaRAMa628April 08, 2020 06:20PM

  California and games

WestRiverRam191April 08, 2020 06:43PM

  Re: California and games

Rampage2K-174April 08, 2020 07:23PM

  Re: California and games

ramBRO171April 08, 2020 07:37PM

  Re: California and games

Rampage2K-225April 08, 2020 07:48PM

  Re: California and games

ramBRO239April 08, 2020 08:07PM

  Re: California and games

Rampage2K-155April 08, 2020 08:20PM

  Re: California and games

ramBRO133April 08, 2020 08:37PM

  Re: California and games

Rampage2K-226April 08, 2020 09:41PM

  Great article, Mama, and California games

leafnose193April 09, 2020 08:25AM

  Re: Great article, Mama, and California games

ramBRO149April 09, 2020 12:18PM

  C'mon. Doctors opinions are rock solid.

NewMexicoRam144April 09, 2020 01:13PM

  Plaschke: It Looks Like The Sports World Could Be In A Timeout Until 2021

ramBRO180April 08, 2020 07:48PM

  Re: Plaschke: It Looks Like The Sports World Could Be In A Timeout Until 2021

Rampage2K-163April 08, 2020 07:52PM

  not everyone has access to LAT articles

zn118April 09, 2020 12:29PM

  Re: not everyone has access to LAT articles

ramBRO147April 09, 2020 12:54PM

  Re: California and games

waterfield123April 08, 2020 07:50PM

  speculation is so tough right now...

LMU93161April 09, 2020 07:09AM

  Re: speculation is so tough right now...

ramBRO116April 09, 2020 08:48AM

  Re: speculation is so tough right now...

waterfield114April 09, 2020 11:02AM

  Life Without Sports

MamaRAMa183April 09, 2020 06:35AM

  I don't think the numbers of people.........

21Dog156April 09, 2020 07:29AM

  Agreed...

JamesJM102April 09, 2020 02:35PM

  Not at all.

Ramgator250April 09, 2020 01:24PM

  JMO

VANRAM182April 09, 2020 02:39PM

  Re: JMO

waterfield106April 09, 2020 03:07PM

  Not sure how that works...

JamesJM132April 09, 2020 03:39PM