- Senator
Ben Sasse wantscollege football to go on as scheduled in the fall. - The Nebraska-based Republican penned a letter to presidents of schools in the
Big Ten conference in which he insisted that "we should not cancel the college football season" despite the COVID-19 crisis. - Sasse wrote that "life is about tradeoffs" and that "the structure and discipline of college football programs is very likely safer than what the lived experience of 18- to 22-year-olds will be if there isn't a season."
- Reports suggest the Big Ten is on the verge of calling off the 2020 season, with all but two of its member programs voting this weekend to postpone, per Dan Patrick.
Ben Sasse wants the 2020 college football season to go on as scheduled this fall.
The
"There are not guarantees that college football will be completely safe — that's absolutely true; it's always true," Sasse acknowledged. "But the structure and discipline of college football programs is very likely safer than what the lived experience of 18- to 22-year-olds will be if there isn't a season."
"Life is about tradeoffs," he added.
—Ross Dellenger (@RossDellenger) August 10, 2020
Despite Sasse's full-throated endorsement of forging on with play, the Big Ten is already well on its way to calling off the 2020 season. Reports suggest that the conference — which includes Sasse's home-state Cornhuskers among its member schools — will announce its decision to abstain from fall football on Tuesday. And according to Dan Patrick, all but two teams — Nebraska and Iowa — elected against playing the season in a vote taken by representatives of all 14 Big Ten programs.
It's no surprise the Big Ten would be amongst the first of college football's
"Nobody wanted to be the first to do it," a coach of a Power 5 team told ESPN. "Now, nobody will want to be the last."
Many student-athletes also harbor serious reservations about the risks associated with taking the field. In recent days, student-athletes across the NCAA have joined forces to issue demands about the upcoming season and beyond.
After "hundreds" of players in the Pac-12 threatened to boycott the season via a letter published in The Players Tribune, Big Ten athletes penned their own list of demands for their conference's leaders under the title #BigTenUnited. And on Sunday, some of the biggest names in college football — including Clemson Tigers quarterback Trevor Lawrence and Ohio State Buckeyes QB Justin Fields — banded together to declare their desire to play this year, but only if safety protocols are met, and the
Other conferences have already done away with their seasons in light of the pandemic. The Ivy League canceled all fall athletics in early July, and several smaller Division I conferences — including the Mid-American Conference — followed their lead a month later. Likewise, the NCAA's Division II and Division III programs also recently resolved to cancel all fall sports championships.
Whether or not the rest of college football — and the Power 5 conferences — will cancel their seasons remains to be seen, but momentum does not appear to be in Sasse's favor.
- Read more:
- The college football season is suddenly on the brink of falling apart as 4 of the Power 5 conferences inch closer to canceling their seasons
- Pac-12 student-athletes are reportedly getting cut from their teams after uniting to sit out the 2020 season due to coronavirus and racial inequity concerns
- Odell Beckham Jr. says the NFL shouldn't go through with the 2020 season during the coronavirus pandemic
- A recent college grad is facing prison time for trying to fix a St. John's basketball game by bribing friends on the other team