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Big Ten Will Resume College Football Season In October

Ohio State Marching Band and Alumni Marching Band members perform Script Ohio at an Ohio State football game [Thomas Bradley /  WOSU]
Ohio State Marching Band and Alumni Marching Band Members perform Script Ohio at an Ohio State football game [Thomas Bradley / WOSU News]

Ohio State football is coming back in October.

In a reversal from last month, the Big Ten presidents voted unanimously to resume the football season starting the weekend of Oct. 23-24, 2020.

The conference  announced Wednesday that each team will have an eight-game schedule. Along with a return date, the conference also set requirements for safety protocols such as daily antigen testing for all student-athletes, coaches, trainers and other on-field individuals.

Students who test positive for COVID-19 before a practice or game must then take a PCR test, which is more accurate, to confirm the result.

“Everyone associated with the Big Ten should be very proud of the groundbreaking steps that are now being taken to better protect the health and safety of the student-athletes and surrounding communities,” said Dr. Jim Borchers, Ohio State head physician and co-chair of the Big Ten's Return to Competition Task Force medical subcommittee.

The decision to resume competition comes a little more than a month after the conference's controversial  move in August to postpone all fall sports. The initial vote was reportedly 11-3 in favor of postponing, with Ohio State among the schools voting against.

That cancellation was itself a reversal from the Big Ten's announcement just a week before of a condensed 10-game schedule, which would have pitted Ohio State against Illinois for its first game on Sept. 3.

Ohio State's head coach Ryan Day and quarterback Justin Fields were among the most vocal criticsof the Big Ten's postponement, which was expected to take a large toll on the university's finances and the professional prospects of many Ohio State players.

"While I understand the Big Ten Conference's decision to postpone the football season because of health and safety considerations, the communication of information from the Big Ten following the decision has been disappointing and often unclear," Day said last week. "However, we still have an opportunity to give our young men what they have worked so hard for: a chance to safely compete for a national championship this fall."

While other college football conferences like the SEC and Big 12 moved ahead with their seasons, several Ohio State players – including preseason All-American cornerback  Shaun Wade and offensive guard  Wyatt Davis – decided to opt out entirely in order to prepare for the 2021 NFL draft.

Ohio State's new president Kristina Johnson says she "enthusiastically" supports the Big Ten's change of course.

Big Ten commissioner Kevin Warren has  defended the initial vote and previously said the conference would not reconsider postponing fall sports, citing increasing COVID-19 transmission rates and uncertainties around recovery and long-term effects. But he wrote on Wednesday that the goal has always been to return to competition.

“Our focus with the Task Force over the last six weeks was to ensure the health and safety of our student-athletes," Warren said.

The Big Ten will start daily testing by Sept. 30. The conference says it will use data on positivity rates within the teams and the larger community to make decisions about altering or pausing practices and games.

Universities will also require students who test positive to undergo cardiac testing, and be cleared by a school-designated cardiologist before returning to play. Students will be restricted from returning to play until at least 21 days after testing positive for COVID-19.

According to Ohio State's  coronavirus dashboard, 2,253 students and 33 employees have tested positive for COVID-19 as of Monday. That's a 3.83% positivity rate among students and a 1.84% positivity rate among employees.

Ohio State has not disclosed how many athletes have tested positive, although the school  halted voluntary workouts for a week in July following a round of COVID-19 tests.

The conference said it will announce updates on other delayed sports soon.

Copyright 2020 WOSU 89.7 NPR News. To see more, visit WOSU 89.7 NPR News.