I would agree that to have any sports this fall there would have to be some sort of treatment that works. Without that there won't be sports or any large gatherings - probably won't be students on campus. If there is no students on campus there will be no college sports - you can't say it not ok for students to be in close spaces but it is okay for student athletes to be physically interacting.
I am watching closely what happens elsewhere. Some places are getting ready to slowly start opening things up a little. Others (like Italy and Spain) are extending their lockdowns.
Singapore has activated a 1-month lockdown after thinking they had it licked.
That story is an excellent read.
In order to make this work, a few things are going to have to happen. First, the number of cases and deaths are going to have to drop significantly and stay down for some period of time.
Second, you have to have testing ready so that any time you even start to see any sort of uptick you can quickly get in front of it before it can get out of hand.
Third, then you have to have a very orderly and very slow re-opening of the economy.
Fourth when you do have an outbreak then you need to do contact tracing very quickly and you need some sort of treatment to help people recover.
The fact that the issue in Singapore is being driven by dorm living is not the greatest of signs for colleges.
This is a much more serious virus than the flu. Even with the flu shot anywhere from 10M to 50M Americans get the flu each winter. But only 16K to 50K die from it.
If we allowed this to run rampant and infect 10-50M people in a couple of months the deaths would be in the millions.
FWIW, I think we are going to see a national experiment in terms of how fast this can spread. My belief is that there are going to be some states that decide to largely re-open and other states that will decide to stay closed longer. We'll probably have a sense in July/Aug. of how well we are doing since it seems to take about 6 weeks to 2 months for it to ramp up and get really out of control.
The other thing to look at is what do some big states do. The Governor and head of the Health Agency in CA have said they don't see sports returning in CA before Thanksgiving. If they hold to that it is going to make it alot more difficult for sports to resume. Think how many professional and college sports teams reside in CA. CA decision on Name, Image, Likeness basically forced the NCAA's hand in taking it seriously.
Here is a good article with the AD from Ohio State.
https://www.cbssports.com/college-f...mes-without-fans-but-player-safety-is-at-top/
He is hoping to play games but he is also preparing for a potential $50M loss (the lost revenue from 7 home games - does not include TV revenue). He makes it clear they are working toward the idea of playing games, but if a decision is made that students are not on campus then there will not be college sports. He says they will not play games without fans allowed in the stands. If its not considered safe to have fans then he doesn't think it is safe for the student athletes.
Finally, I have little belief that this isn't going to turn into a political football. You are already seeing individuals and organizations on both ends of the political spectrum trying to use this and we haven't even gotten past the mid-point yet. Multiple states (in GA) are weeks away from their peaks.
Having a couple of nurses (including an ICU nurse) in the cul-de-sac can be helpful since GA isn't really providing any real information on how many patients are using ICU beds. Basically my neighbors are saying that hospitals in Atlanta are full in their ICU wards with COVID patients. Not to a breaking point yet, but full. Any significant spike will cause an issue.