Having college campuses open doesn’t rule out classes still being online

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It was Missouri athletics director Jim Sterk who pointed out the glaring omission most people have made in trying to guess whether there will be college football starting in the summer.

“Campus, if it’s operational, we can have sports,” Sterk said in a teleconference Thursday. “Classes are a different matter. If a school is online, it doesn’t necessarily prevent athletic events from happening.”

Yahoo Sports’ Nick Bromberg read it basically the same way I did which is why the SEC vote coming up next week will probably provide some kind of advancement for sports beginning June 1.

“If there’s a closed campus schools probably aren’t going to be able to host games whether that’s football or any other fall sport,” he said Friday afternoon with Derek Ruscin and Zach Arns (Ruscin & Zach) on ESPN Arkansas. “If instruction is online but campus is open, we can probably still do that.”

“I’m convinced the college football season is going to be held in some shape or form,” Bromberg said. “I don’t know necessarily if all 130 FBS teams will be playing.”

Now I’ve been saying that since all this started. The reason is very simple because nobody can afford to let it fail.

“There’s going to be a college football season because we know just how much football subsidizes every other program,” he said.

Some smaller schools have already started cutting non-revenue programs. It will probably wreak havoc on the pre-built schedules and may actually get the SEC to each team playing nine conference games (a move Alabama’s Nick Saban has pushed for a couple of years) and more regional non-conference games.

The financial landscape is going to change and the biggest effects from this shutdown is going to be felt more a couple of years down the road.

For smaller programs the money is going to get tight.

Pro sports are inching their way back to playing games. Major league baseball is planning a start around July 4. NBA players are pushing to get things rolling there for some kind of season.

Even the NFL has opened their buildings for the first time in awhile beginning this coming week.

Like a lot of other things, it’s about the money.

“That’s only going to build,” Bromberg said.

To follow the NASCAR model of compartmentalizing things, college football would have to limit players to position groups which won’t be much of an issue until August when you have to start getting the team together.

It will depend on what happens with the coronavirus. There is no way to have a consistent test that produces results fast enough to really be accurate for more than a few minutes.

Take the test, it shows negative, walk outside and, in theory anyway, that person could become positive. That’s one of the handful of problems with contagious viruses. Short of being in a bubble there’s no way to avoid it.

It’s why NASCAR is not doing the testing at the track. It’s almost impossible to accomplish and the numbers are starting to show being outside or in open environments is safer than staying inside.

“I don’t know how it gets in August,” Bromberg said. “At the same time, as we have learned, our whole world could be completely different in six weeks.”

And, yes, the whole issue has falling into the quagmire of politics where common sense and good judgement don’t collied very often.

“It’s another part of the conversation we keep having over and over again,” Bromberg said.

And it’s politics that will provide a margin of error that might be pretty small.

“If you screw up that one shot, you’re second chance is not going to be nearly as good as the first one,” he said.

That’s why patience is going to be the most valuable thing for fans right now.

It’s required when you’re trying to hit a moving target.

McGee on return of live sports this weekend with NASCAR

ESPN’s Ryan McGee, who covers NASCAR and college football, talked Friday afternoon with Derek Ruscin and Zach Arns (Ruscin & Zach) on ESPN Arkansas about the drastic changes for Sunday’s race in Darlington.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast — DMAC as the Hog Logo, Pittman on Zoom and more!

Tye & Tommy on who you think of when you see the Hog logo, DMAC joins, plus how sports impacts the economy!

D-Mac would like to see Razorbacks put No. 5 in rafters … eventually

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Darren McFadden looks on the football field these days at Arkansas games and hopes whoever is wearing No. 5 does well but then they will put the number in the rafters.

“I would love to see that number hung up in the rafters,” he told Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas Friday morning. “I’m not the type guy to go out and make a big scene out of it but I would love to see that number hung up.”

McFadden played three seasons and he knows what he accomplished.

“Just for what I did and the history,” he said. “I own just about every school rushing record, College Football Hall of Fame, two-time Heisman runner-up, two-time Doak Walker award. I think that’s a jersey that definitely should be hung up.”

The current wearer of the number is Rakeem Boyd and he’s fully aware of the significance of having that number on his back. He’s talked about the honor of wearing it at Arkansas.

“It’s always mixed emotions when I see it,” D-Mac said. “I always want them to do their best but at the same time it’s not a number I want to see out there really. It’s part of football and not something you can just take with you.”

The only numbers retired at Arkansas is Clyde Scott’s 12 and Brandon Burlsworth’s 77. Scott’s number was briefly brought back (with his permission) for All-American kicker and punter Steve Little to wear from 1974-77.

It’s just a hunch but D-Mac would probably be okay with Sam Pittman needing it to land a potential All-American every couple of decades or so.

“As time goes on, the right people will make the right decisions and it will eventually be hung up,” he said.

McFadden is also frustrated with the results on the field the last few years … and it cost him a little bit of money.

“It’s been brutal,” he said. “Especially being in the locker room (while with the Raiders and Cowboys) with guys you played against in college. Guys make friendly bets and things. I used to meet with the quarterbacks in Oakland and every week I’d pick Arkansas.

“I don’t care who they were playing I was picking Arkansas. Eventually it got to the point where I’d just bring in my $10, lay it on the desk and told ’em to let me know if we end up winning.”

Darren McFadden conversation on The Morning Rush!

The greatest Razorback of all time Darren McFadden joined The Morning Rush for an exclusive interview! Check it out!

No rush to decide fate of sports as we don’t know what we don’t know

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With “corona fatigue” starting to sweep across the country, predictions about our fate seem to change multiple times daily and sports fans are almost at the point of desperation to find out something.

That’s probably not going to happen anytime soon.

“We just gotta wait and see what happens,” WatchStadium.com college football analyst Brett McMurphy said Thursday afternoon with Derek Ruscin and Zach Arns (Ruscin & Zach) on ESPN Arkansas.

In other words, sports fans, none of us really have a clue what’s going to happen or when it’s going to happen.

Granted, in Arkansas we haven’t had mandatory shut-down orders. There’s been some suggestions and guidance but by and large the good citizens have been allowed to decide what risk is comfortable for them.

McMurphy doesn’t know, either, but he’s been talking with everybody in the world of college football and there’s hope.

“It’s very realistic to have a full 12-game schedule this year,” he said about college football, but he didn’t mention any specific timetable for that schedule to start. “(Commissioners and athletic directors) stress anything and everything is on the table.”

SEC presidents and chancellors are scheduled to vote May 22 on whether to allow their schools to open athletic facilities to athletes for voluntary workouts in June, according to a story at ESPN.com from college football writer Sam Khan, Jr.

In March, the league voted to suspend things through May and SEC commissioner Greg Sankey was confirming or denying anything Thursday.

Again, we don’t know what we don’t know.

Around the SEC the total number of positive tests for the combined states in the league is far below that of New York. Testing is a hot-button topic, although the leaders on the whole coronavirus mess testified before the U.S. Senate this week that it’s not really that accurate.

You could take the test that’s negative and be positive 10 minutes later when you go to the first door outside the doctor’s office. That comes from the top scientist in the country on the national task force.

What are the real numbers? We have no idea.

The numbers show a staggeringly low number of deaths among healthy young people. Even testing positive the odds are you won’t get sick, much less die.

There won’t be a vaccine by football season and that’s a little misleading. According to the top scientist in the country on the nation’s task force again, out of every 100 people that get the vaccine 40 are still going to get it. The numbers say 2 of those people will, unfortunately, pass away.

That’s if they duplicate the results of the most successful vaccine in history on viral infections (the flu). Treatments are improving daily, which is why the death rate percentage is dropping and likely why we’ll see college football start on time.

You can’t look at the daily numbers without looking at the overall context. We will likely never really know what the exact number actually is and there will likely be positive results for a while.

In the end, though, the guess is economic necessity will bring college sports back.

Which is what McMurphy sounds like he expects the powers that be to do.

“They want to try to start Sept. 5,” he said Thursday afternoon. “The one thing to count on is how critical the money is … they’ll figure out a way to play.”

Nobody has a clue what that’s going to look like, though.

And making a decision (or even predictions) now is a little silly.

“I don’t see the big rush out west to cancel stuff that far off,” McMurphy said. “We need to wait a little bit more. We’ve got until we have more information. It looks like the country progressing better. What will it look like in a month?”

Well, we don’t know because we don’t know what’s going to happen in the next month.

Pittman lands another walk-on from Arkansas, which is what he wants

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After several years of coaching staffs apparently interested in watching some of the best players in Arkansas go elsewhere, Sam Pittman told us he wanted to keep ’em home and that’s what he’s doing.

Shiloh Christian wide receiver Beau Cason (6-5, 190) chose to walk-on with the Razorbacks on Thursday, announcing it via Twitter:

Pittman told us he wanted to focus more on getting a lot of in-state walk-ons and Cason is the 12th  from inside the state to go with a couple from surrounding states.

“We have an opportunity with our university with how we can get kids in that Arkansas needs to go heavy on preferred walk-ons and walk-ons in their program,” Pittman told us earlier.”

It’s why he has all 10 assistant coaches recruiting within the state. Yes, it pays dividends in various areas.

“If you do that, there’s a lot of good things that can come out of that, but one of them is I think your walk-on program is going to be much better,” Pittman said. “The relationships with the high school coaches are going to be better, relationship with the state of Arkansas is going to be better.”

Here are the walk-ons committed to the Hogs right now:

• Braden Bratcher, QB, Little Rock Pulaski Academy
• Donte Buckner, RB, White Hall
• Chris Harris, ATH, Dumas
• Kevin Compton, ATH, Watson Chapel
• Truitt Tollett, WR, Springdale Shiloh Christian
• Beau Cason, WR, Springdale Shiloh Christian
• Jonas Higson, TE, Bentonville West
• Brooks Both, LB, Harrison
• Caleb Fields, LB, Fayetteville
• Chandler McIntosh, LB, Little Rock Joe T. Robinson
• Jackson Woodard, LB, Little Rock Christian
• Rhett Thurman, K, Cabot
• Vito Calvaruso, K, Jefferson City (Mo.) Helias Catholic
• Eli Chism, LS, Shreveport (La.) Calvary Baptist