U.S. college towns on edge as
coronavirus threatens football season
Send a link to a friend
[May 29, 2020]
By Amy Tennery
(Reuters) - In 2019, Dante Lucchesi and
his Champs Sports Grill in State College, Pennsylvania, were on a
roll.
The 400-seat restaurant his father opened in 1986 was full every
weekend when Penn State University's powerhouse football team took
the field.
The downtown location he added in 2017, with roughly twice the
capacity and just over a block from campus, was the runner-up in
Barstool Sports' Best College Bar contest and host to a surprise
Jonas Brothers concert featured on the Today Show.
But now, like thousands of local business owners in university towns
across the country, Lucchesi faces the unthinkable: A year of
college football wiped off the calendar because of a pandemic that
has torpedoed the economy and may rewrite the rules for mass public
gatherings.
On seven or eight weekends each fall, thousands of fans and alumni
pour into State College, a town of fewer than 45,000, to watch the
Nittany Lions football team. In a region that saw no economic growth
in 2018, the last year for which local-level data is available,
football weekends are vital.
"I don't have the answers. I'm not going to pretend like I do," said
Lucchesi. "My business hinges on this, on the football season and
everything."
Seven hundred miles south in Athens, Georgia, Peter Dale is
anxiously awaiting word on season plans for the Sugar Bowl-winning
University of Georgia and what it might mean for his three
restaurants – the National, Seabear and Maepole.
"People are just now starting to think about what are some of the
options, but none of them are very good," he said.
David Bradley, head of the local chamber of commerce, estimated
220,000 out-of-towners descended on Athens - nearly twice the city's
population - for the Bull Dogs' nail-biting win over the Notre Dame
Fighting Irish last September.
"For home games, you're probably talking about a $3 to $4 million
economic impact into the community, on a positive side when you've
got games and on the negative side when you don't," Bradley said.
"So it's a really big deal."
'THE UNFORTUNATE REALITY'
Like major professional leagues, college programs are weighing
options for salvaging a season, which typically kicks off in earnest
in September. Possibilities include requiring fans to space out in
stadiums, holding games without spectators, even postponing the
season until the spring.
In many cases, the football season decision hinges on whether
campuses reopen to students. The University of Michigan, a Penn
State rival in the Big 10 Conference, will not field a team if
students did not return to campus in the fall, its president told
the Wall Street Journal.
There is uncertainty about when college football will be back.
The NCAA has said student-athletes can resume voluntary activities
on campus as early as June 1, if schools and local laws do not
prohibit them. And this week, college football officials and TV
networks extended a June 1 target for determining the season's early
game times.
[to top of second column] |
The Penn State Nittany Lions leave the field before the game against
the Iowa Hawkeyes at Kinnick Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey
Becker-USA TODAY Sports/File Photo
Asked about the upcoming season, Penn State Athletics said it would
continue "planning for various scenarios." Georgia’s athletics
director declined to comment on contingency plans for the season.
For the big programs, football generates the lion's share of
athletic revenues, and any disruption will feed through university
budgets and local economies where the schools are major employers.
More than $100 million of the Penn State athletics department's
$164.5 million operating revenue came from football during the
2018-2019 fiscal year, according to its annual NCAA financial
report. Nearly $37 million came from ticket sales for games at the
106,000-seat Beaver Stadium.
In Georgia it is even bigger, with the grid iron program accounting
for $123 million out of total sports revenue of $174 million. Home
game ticket sales totaled $34.6 million.
The budget pressures from a canceled season will force tough
decisions about other programs that count on a slice of the football
pie, said Ken Rodgers, a director at S&P. "That's sort of the
unfortunate reality."
Even pushing the football season to the spring comes with
challenges: After losing the end of the lucrative basketball season
in March, many colleges and universities will be reluctant to
trample on the basketball schedule this season.
'A SOCIAL RITUAL'
For the people who measure their lives in first downs, the
uncertainty is a hard pill to swallow.
"I wouldn’t even know what Penn State would be like without a
football season," said rising Penn State University senior Emily
Sensale, a Champs waitress who has been attending games since she
was 13.
"As much as I obviously, selfishly want the 110,000 people in the
stadium," said Sensale, "I just personally don’t know how it would
affect people’s safety."
Brett Bawcum, acting director of Georgia's Redcoat marching band,
said the football season is an experience that would be difficult to
replace for the roughly 430 students under his leadership, who
brought Sanford Stadium to its feet with renditions of "Livin' on a
Prayer" and "Don't Stop Believing" last year.
"Honestly it's as deep of a social ritual as you will find
anywhere," said Bawcum.
"There are lives that revolve around it."
(Reporting by Amy Tennery; Editing by Dan Burns, Noeleen Walder and
Alistair Bell)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |