https://sports.yahoo.com/how-c...ootball-032940912.html
How the California State University system's decision to go online only in fall could affect college football
White, who oversees the system's 23 universities, announced that its campuses will hold fall classes almost exclusively online due to the lingering effects of the coronavirus pandemic. The decision made the CSU system - the largest four-year public university system in the country with more than 480,000 undergraduate students - the first to tell its students they would not be returning to campus for the fall semester.
That does not bode well for the normal return of football in the fall, especially when coupled with recent comments from Mountain West commissioner Craig Thompson and NCAA president Mark Emmert. In an interview with the Mountain West Network, Thompson said there would be no athletics taking place until campuses are open and fully operational.
"Unless they're in full mode with dormitories and housing and all of the other facilities are open, we won't have college athletics," Thompson said April 21.
"We will not have college athletics until the campuses are open."
"All of the Division I commissioners and every president that I've talked to is in clear agreement: If you don't have students on campus, you don't have student-athletes on campus," Emmert said. "That doesn't mean it has to be up and running in the full normal model, but you've got to treat the health and well-being of the athletes at least as much as the regular students. So if a school doesn't reopen, then they're not going to be playing sports. It's really that simple."
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Edited: 06/08/2020
at 06:37 PM
by dingpatch