No league in Europe is playing with fans.
I can think of one death as a direct result of college football from the last decade or so - the Maryland kid that sunk Edsall’s career.
As a parent I would be extremely concerned especially if there is no coherent plan. Contrary to popular belief, young people do for from this. Hospitals are starting to see more young people admitted. Any parent wants to know how you are going to protect their kid. You also have to think about the other vulnerable people they may come into contact with. What happens when there is an outbreak on a team during the season and players or staff need hospitalization or worse?
100% false again, Red.
Jury is still out on that.The more that get it, the sooner its over.
The parents should crush the hopes and dreams of their children because they are frustrated that the NCAA can’t come up with consistent guidelines to protect everyone and keep a level playing field?if a parent is concerned about this then they should just forbid their child to play. The odds on dying of the virus are less than a player dying from a broken neck on a block or tackle. So why ever let them participate anyway.
Go Jackets!
I wonder how many Mich State fans went to this bar and whether it changes the picture at all.
https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2020/06/27/...-harpers/index.html?__twitter_impression=true
I've haven't seen any stats that would support this statement. It's basically a false statement.
CDC just released a study through May 30th. In it 1,234 individuals 10-19 have been admitted to the hospital - 2.5% of all testing positive cases.
216 ended up in ICU (that's 0.4% of all testing positive cases). 33 died (o.1% of all covid positive cases).
Note that due to the data cutoff date those raw numbers probably need to be raised 75% to account for where we stand today.
Those are small numbers. But I don't know of any football players that have died from a broken neck much less 33.
Note that is conservative as the numbers for the 20-29 age group are much higher than the 10-19 age group - even if very small compared to the older populations.
In the 20-29 age group the numbers are 6,704 hospitalized (3.7%), 864 in ICU (0.5%), 273 deaths (0.1%)
Once again assume those numbers are roughly 75% higher today.
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/pdfs/mm6924e2-H.pdf
I'm not arguing young people are at high risk, that is not the case, but to say that young people are more likely to die from a football injury is not likely to hold up to any scrutiny.
Interestingly, the avg age of death in the US is younger than it is in Europe. US has a much smaller share of its death coming from 80+ compared to europe while it has larger percentages coming from 40-69 yr olds. In each age bracket between 40-70 the US death % is a little less than twice that of Europe.
Man you gotta stop with this stuff. The virus has literally been around for about five months in the US. How can there be any evidence of “long term” health issues when there hasn’t even been a long term. Is two months in recovery “long term?”Focusing on death alone might not be enough. There is at least some evidence for longer term health issues in even asymptomatic young people. Does no good to be cavalier about something we are just starting to understand.
Man you gotta stop with this stuff. The virus has literally been around for about five months in the US. How can there be any evidence of “long term” health issues when there hasn’t even been a long term. Is two months in recovery “long term?”
Deaths and hospitalizations are what we need to be using to decide policies in sport and everything else. As long as those two measures are under control then there should be no forced restrictions. Right now we are trending in the right direction and I think everything will ultimately be based on these two measures.
Just some thoughts on this. First I am not sure if these Covid19 numbers are for US, Worldwide or just England/Wales but they do not account for the physical condition of those who were hospitalized/died. Were they already compromised from a health standpoint? The quick google search on football related deaths I did stated 42 young men died from football related deaths between 2015 and 2017. This represented participation at all levels of the sport throughout the US. That would equate to a large number of people but no where near the numbers represented in the Ramblin Red information (assuming it is world wide). So statistically you would need to know the exact data in both cases to derive the correct conclusion. So is it really a false statement?
Go Jackets!