College football players at a crossroads as U.S. charts path in COVID-19
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[August 18, 2020]
By Amy Tennery
(Reuters) - As the debate rages over
whether U.S. college football should open its season during the
coronavirus pandemic, University of West Virginia player K.J. Martin has
already made up his mind: he is out.
Martin, who suffers from asthma and sickle cell disease, plays safety
for the Mountaineers. He said he did not feel it was safe to play and
was stunned when the Big 12 conference, which includes his university,
decided to start the season as planned in the fall even as other major
conferences postponed their seasons.
“I was shocked about the news due to other conferences canceling,”
Martin told Reuters.
The Big 12, one of the most powerful conferences in U.S. college
football, said on Aug. 12 it was confident the sport could be played
safely with measures in place to mitigate the risk of COVID-19.
The announcement came a day after two other “Power Five” conferences -
the Pac-12 and Big Ten - said they would sideline players because of
concerns over the outbreak, with the hope that they could resume
competition in the spring.
With just weeks remaining before the traditional kick off to the college
season, the split among the sport's biggest powers on is emblematic of a
wider political and cultural debate playing out across the country about
how life should be conducted during a pandemic.
Much more than the health and safety of players is at stake. College
football is big business, and universities that forego the season
collectively stand to lose billions of dollars in revenue at a time when
many are experiencing declining enrollment because of the outbreak.
Martin's pre-existing health issues and broader concern over whether its
safe to take part in the high-contact sport during the pandemic were
enough to convince him to stay off the field, even as his teammates got
the green light to play.
Following a tweet in which Martin announced that he had opted out of the
season, fans rallied around his decision.
"KJ, we all wish you well and look forward to your return," @hannah_bobbi
wrote on Twitter. "With your underlying health issues you need to be
more careful than the average person."
“I wasn’t surprised the fans were supportive," said Martin, who will
play as a redshirt sophomore in his next season. “As far as backlash, it
was expected.”
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West Virginia Mountaineers wide receiver Willie Milhouse scores a
touchdown in the fourth quarter of play against the Clemson Tigers
during the 2012 Discover Orange Bowl NCAA football game in Miami,
Florida, January 4, 2012. REUTERS/Joe Skipper/File Photo
"(Players) have the opportunity to opt out and remain on
scholarship," West Virginia head Coach Neal Brown said in a
statement on Monday. "We have had one student-athlete who has chosen
to do this at this time. I understand it and I respect it."
Some 350 miles to the north, University of Michigan defensive back
Hunter Reynolds faced a different predicament: A willingness to play
in a conference that had pulled the plug on the fall season.
Speaking from his Ann Arbor apartment, the defensive back told
Reuters that when reports first came out about the season being
placed on hold, he "was just holding onto that last little bit of
hope."
His Big 10 team had already progressed through mini camp into
regular training when the conference put the season on hold. The
team had not even gotten to practice with pads on, Reynolds said.
Ohio State University quarterback Justin Fields set up a petition on
Sunday to reinstate the 2020 Big Ten football season, garnering more
than 170,000 signatures in less than a day. "This cause is close to
my heart," Fields wrote on Twitter.
"We want to play. We believe that safety protocols have been
established and can be maintained to mitigate concerns of exposure
to Covid 19," the petition read.
Michigan's Reynolds said some players were taking it harder than
others.
“I guess ‘shell-shocked’ is a word you could use,” he said. “It’s
going to weigh differently on everyone and there’s really no right
or wrong way to cope with this.”
(Reporting by Amy Tennery; Editing by Noeleen Walder, Dan Burns and
Dan Grebler)
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