Here is a good series of articles about how COVID-19 is affecting college sports.
This first one talked to over 20 college basketball coaches, AD's and Presidents's including Pastner
https://www.cbssports.com/college-b...-college-basketball-and-athletic-departments/
Among the topics in this one - Athletics not being the highest priority, academic anxieties with SA's now remote. Extra year for SR (considered very unlikely and coaches are against it), More players may transfer than ever before (coaches are expecting a huge spike at the end of April or May after the NCAA votes on the one-time transfer rule), NBA Draft timeline, impact on next year's scheduling. No one expects the students to be on campus this summer.
"These are people concerned, first and foremost, over the same issues you and I are concerned about: well-being of their loved ones and themselves; a hope that society can come together and implement consistent social distancing by staying at home and doing everything possible to bring this country back to normal; and relying on medical experts to shepherd us to that return."
"We're in crisis mode," a power-conference athletic director told me. "My opinion means **** to me, let alone anybody else. I haven't even allowed myself to think about what that new day is going to eventually look like."
ADs, conference commissioners and school presidents are being pulled in myriad directions, and at this point, according to sources I spoke with, very few of their conversations include long-term projections about the resumption of college athletics. Nobody knows when that can happen because American society, relying upon the expertise of health officials, has to exhibit a collective understanding, patience and fortitude to beat out an undiscriminating virus that won't have a vaccine for more than a year.
College basketball recruiting
https://www.cbssports.com/college-b...ing-for-the-big-changes-coming-in-recruiting/
Very few coaches believe there will be a summer recruiting season.
Hopes are already so low for later this year that multiple coaches told me they'd put it between a 5-10% chance that there is a July live recruiting period, a crucial time for coaches to evaluate players.
"There isn't going to be a Peach Jam this year," one ACC coach said of the
most important recruiting event of the year.
Will there be a college football season
https://www.cbssports.com/college-f...led-coaches-ads-weigh-possibility-and-impact/
AD's and coaches really hope so, and SEC coaches are optimistic, but no one really knows.
It hit Texas A&M athletic director Ross Bjork this week when the 2020 Tokyo Olympics were postponed. That event was set to take place roughly a month before the start of the
college football season (July 24 to Aug. 9). Olympic officials finally concluded it was not wise for 11,000 athletes from all over the world to congregate for two-plus weeks.
"With that news right there, then that starts creeping into the football season and training camps and scheduling," Bjork said. "… I don't know how you operate [if the season is canceled]. Where would the bailout come from? Because we would all have to have one if we were going to maintain any sort of normalcy."
Virginia coach Bronco Mendenhall
already said he is open to a "modified season."
North Carolina coach Mack Brown
recently told reporters, "There is a fear of, 'Would we have a season?' Would we have a partial season? What does a partial season mean?' There is a great concern because of the revenue that comes in with football."
Try selling season tickets in these uncertain times. Several schools have extended renewal deadlines for obvious reasons.
"One or two things could drive that [interest] down," Stricklin said. "One is people don't think [the season is] going to happen. I don't think we're at that point."
Try raising money for facilities. Florida and Georgia are well down the road in raising funds for building major athletic projects.
Never mind any existing shortfall. There may be issue of re-recruiting donors who have already pledged.
"Those are all gifts," McGarity said. "They're not obligated by law to make those gifts come true."