Going back to the middle of a pandemic? Justin Fields of Ohio State and the ten grandparents lose their point

All right, enough.

Not that, but up close.

That’s my message to Ohio State Quarterback Justin Fields for more than a few parents whose children play football in the Big Ten and for those who haven’t paid attention in recent years.

For many reasons, starting and ending with the lawsuits that oppose the mother, father and great-great-grandfather of all trials pending any convention that decides to play football this fall a pandemic, Big Ten presidents have banned gambling on their campuses. . until spring maybe.

They had no choice.

The same goes for the presidents of The Pac-12.

yes, well. Even if those other Power Five members (SEC, ACC, and Big 12) say they forget about COVID-19 to continue their inalienable right to block, attack, and earn a percentage in proportion to the $4 billion of peak seasons generated through those five conferences. , will be enrolled in Big Ten and Pac-12 outside of Halloween.

In fact, until Race Day.

It’s October 12th.

The coronavirus cares no less than Fields this last audition for professionals before the NFL draft or the “Script Ohio” game at halftime in the Ohio State-Michigan game.

Still, Fields, the parents of football players of the Big Ten and other rebellious souls target those of smaller gatherings to say that school football players deserve to mock themselves by fighting war games in the box and a coronavirus in the air.

They also say that college leaders forget about those other things.

These brutal things.

All you know is that all those things shook the heads of big ten and Pac-12 presidents before following the mid-American Conference example by pointing out that a season in those situations doesn’t even value cost.

We’re talking about a massive cost.

About those Things Array. .

Remember?

If forgotten, McNair was the 19-year-old University of Maryland offensive lineman, weighing 6 feet and four inches and three hundred pounds, which collapsed preseason education in 2018.

McNair died of a heat stroke almost two weeks later.

Amid threats of legal action through the McNair family, who alleged negligence in the component of those related to the educational and educational personnel of the Terrapins, the following layoffs or resignations in Maryland included the chairman of the board, the president from college, the head coach. two coaches.

Maryland and its new president are in the Big Ten, by the way.

Thus, dozens of lawsuits related to concussions were charged against the NCAA within 4 days in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana.

Translated: These are serious (and expensive) things.

According to these demands, which have been combined with many others before and after, school systems have not done enough with student-athletes for head injuries.

Simply put, he can be sued as crazy if he is the president of a Big Ten or Pac-12 school, for example, and if he allows his football team to play a pandemic, and if the members of that team make a resolution for years later, they suffer from pain because of your resolution, even inconsiderate, at that time, even though those players supported moving in with their parents.

Recently, doctors decided that at least five Big Ten athletes suffered from inflammation of the central muscle called myocarditis, and also claimed that COVID-19 would possibly have contributed to all of this.

Do you see the picture.

The presidents of Big Ten and Pac-12 do.

I started as a professional sports journalist in 1978 at the Cincinnati Enquirer after graduating from the University of Miami, Ohio, and I did the same

I as a professional sports journalist in 1978 at the Cincinnati Enquirer after graduating from the University of Miami, Ohio, and have been doing the same since. I also appear on national television and am a component of a weekly television exhibition in Atlanta. I’ve done everything from ESPN to MSNBC and The Oprah Winfrey Show. As for the writing, I went from running for major San Francisco and Atlanta newspapers to being a national columnist on AOL Sports, MLB. com, Sports On Earth. com and CNN. Com. I’ve covered a lot of sporting events. I have participated in 30 Super Bowls, many NBA World Series and Finals games, Final Fours, several 500 Indianapolis Miles, 500 Miles of Daytona and other car races, primary golf fights and tournaments, golf games. school football and more. I have also won national, regional and local awards along the way.

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