https://www.ajc.com/sports/college/...ootball-game-schedule/Dm9FjKFPrORz1ch2IMjr4K/
That's promising - looks like most in-state SEC / ACC rivals are asking to keep that game even with conference only as a possibility for next season.
#2-3: Let’s dump all the good teams in 1 podOne proposal league athletic directors are considering is dividing the ACC’s 15 schools — traditional football independent and partial conference member Notre Dame would be included — into three geographic pods of five. Teams would play each pod rival twice, accounting for eight games.
The aim then would be, in concert with the Southeastern Conference, to add a ninth, and hopefully 10th, contest for each school, preserving the four annual ACC-SEC in-state rivalries: Clemson-South Carolina, Florida State-Florida, Georgia Tech-Georgia and Louisville-Kentucky.
Remember, teams in different pods can play one another, but probably not twice.
Option No. 1
Pod A: Miami, Florida State, Georgia Tech, North Carolina, Duke.
Pod B: Virginia Tech, Virginia, Clemson, N.C. State, Wake Forest
Pod C: Syracuse, Boston College, Pittsburgh, Louisville, Notre Dame.
Option No. 2
Pod A: Miami, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Clemson, Virginia Tech.
Pod B: North Carolina, N.C. State, Duke, Wake Forest, Virginia.
Pod C: Syracuse, Boston College, Pittsburgh, Louisville, Notre Dame.
Option No. 3
Pod A: Miami, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Clemson, Louisville.
Pod B: North Carolina, N.C. State, Duke, Wake Forest, Virginia.
Pod C: Syracuse, Boston College, Pittsburgh, Notre Dame, Virginia Tech.
Link
https://richmond.com/sports/college...SS5XWKnvqaBPOLunFvKMD1vT_u6aRQ0P5QkNMpWezNiRU
One proposal league athletic directors are considering is dividing the ACC’s 15 schools — traditional football independent and partial conference member Notre Dame would be included — into three geographic pods of five. Teams would play each pod rival twice, accounting for eight games.
The aim then would be, in concert with the Southeastern Conference, to add a ninth, and hopefully 10th, contest for each school, preserving the four annual ACC-SEC in-state rivalries: Clemson-South Carolina, Florida State-Florida, Georgia Tech-Georgia and Louisville-Kentucky.
Remember, teams in different pods can play one another, but probably not twice.
Option No. 1
Pod A: Miami, Florida State, Georgia Tech, North Carolina, Duke.
Pod B: Virginia Tech, Virginia, Clemson, N.C. State, Wake Forest
Pod C: Syracuse, Boston College, Pittsburgh, Louisville, Notre Dame.
Option No. 2
Pod A: Miami, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Clemson, Virginia Tech.
Pod B: North Carolina, N.C. State, Duke, Wake Forest, Virginia.
Pod C: Syracuse, Boston College, Pittsburgh, Louisville, Notre Dame.
Option No. 3
Pod A: Miami, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Clemson, Louisville.
Pod B: North Carolina, N.C. State, Duke, Wake Forest, Virginia.
Pod C: Syracuse, Boston College, Pittsburgh, Notre Dame, Virginia Tech.
Link
https://richmond.com/sports/college...SS5XWKnvqaBPOLunFvKMD1vT_u6aRQ0P5QkNMpWezNiRU
Wake County (where Raleigh is) is starting with a hybrid approach. Kids will spend 1 week out of 3 in the classroom, and the other two remote learning. With 1/3 the students in the classroom at any time, they will try social distancing.NC high schools are trying to figure out how to return to classrooms this fall. One plan I heard yesterday called for all high schools students (except those with disabilities or learning issues) to have remote classes 100% this year. No sports or band or any extracurricular activities. It depends on classroom space for social distancing and teachers willing to return to the classroom. They are looking at using high school buildings to spread out the middle schoolers. It looks like k-12 is going to be really challenging. If colleges are having classes on campus in NC I wonder how it will work.
Wow, that is going to be tough for parents and the kids. We really could use that vaccine right about now..Wake County (where Raleigh is) is starting with a hybrid approach. Kids will spend 1 week out of 3 in the classroom, and the other two remote learning. With 1/3 the students in the classroom at any time, they will try social distancing.
It's going to be a mess. Parents have a choice of doing this, or moving to the Virtual Academy (online hs). Over 30k have already chosen the virtual academy.
Or we could listen to the pediatric experts (10 of them I think) who stunned the interviewers on CNN (or maybe MSNBC) by saying they would ALL send their children back to school without question.Wow, that is going to be tough for parents and the kids. We really could use that vaccine right about now..
I'm in Raleigh and we're struggling to make a decision. At our kid's schools, the 1/3 capacity is about 7-8 kids in the classroom at a time. It seems like the families that have the resources are jumping on the virtual academy. Our kids want to go back to school but that means we have to trust 6-7 families without knowing where they've been, etc. Durham and Orange Counties are both proposing a minimum of 4 weeks online to start the school year and then will reevaluate the data.Wake County (where Raleigh is) is starting with a hybrid approach. Kids will spend 1 week out of 3 in the classroom, and the other two remote learning. With 1/3 the students in the classroom at any time, they will try social distancing.
It's going to be a mess. Parents have a choice of doing this, or moving to the Virtual Academy (online hs). Over 30k have already chosen the virtual academy.
My son's kids are in Greensboro and they are struggling with a decision. 30% of the teachers are not returning to the classroom. Another 30% said only with mandatory masks.
Having no in person classes at all really does have a downside though. That's the difficult part for me. Virtual learning disproportionately affects lower income students and students with unstable family situations. Lack of support from family in either studying or tutoring, as well as unstable (or poor) internet, hell even the lack of free lunch programs will all affect these kids long term. Not to mention that the teaching and social growth will both suffer with no in person learning.
I don't think all kids should be forced to go to a physical school, and I'm definitely not brushing off the fact that kids may end up getting infected.
I don't know what the answer is, but I hate people from both sides acting like it's a black and white issue.
The superintendent of the Guilford County Schools (Greensboro) stated there is no perfect choice. In fact, she added, there are no good choices for restarting school. They are hoping to pick the least bad choice, knowing that some children and their parents are not going to be well served. When asked about sports, she laughed. Sports are way down the list of things they need to think about after they decide how to restart school. My granddaughter, a rising senior, plays viola in two different youth orchestras. One at the high school. Of course, that will not happen this year. And she plans to major in Music Performance.
If it were not for the money, would college football be any different? If the answer is no, then the NCAA meme that college athletes are amateurs is ludicrous.