Open Letter from Kevin Warren

Submitted by Malarkey on August 19th, 2020 at 6:21 PM

https://bigten.org/news/2020/8/19/general-an-open-letter-to-the-big-ten-community.aspx

 

An Open Letter to the Big Ten Community



  • I write on this occasion to share with you additional information regarding the Big Ten Conference’s decision to postpone the 2020-21 fall sports season. We thoroughly understand and deeply value what sports mean to our student-athletes, their families, our coaches and our fans. The vote by the Big Ten Council of Presidents and Chancellors (COP/C) was overwhelmingly in support of postponing fall sports and will not be revisited. The decision was thorough and deliberative, and based on sound feedback, guidance and advice from medical experts. Despite the decision to postpone fall sports, we continue our work to find a path forward that creates a healthy and safe environment for all Big Ten student-athletes to compete in the sports they love in a manner that helps to prevent the spread of COVID-19 and protects both student-athletes and the surrounding communities.
     
    As you are well aware, we are facing a complicated global pandemic with the SARS-CoV-2 virus discovered in November 2019. The first medically confirmed cases did not appear in the United States until January 2020. Over the course of the past seven months, the U.S. has recorded more than 5.5 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 resulting in more than 170,000 deaths, with more than 22 million confirmed cases and 780,000 lives lost around the world.
     
    We understand the disappointment and questions surrounding the timing of our decision to postpone fall sports, especially in light of releasing a football schedule only six days prior to that decision. From the beginning, we consistently communicated our commitment to cautiously proceed one day at a time with the health, safety and wellness of our student-athletes at the center of our decision-making process. That is why we took simultaneous paths in releasing the football schedule, while also diligently monitoring the spread of the virus, testing, and medical concerns as student-athletes were transitioning to full-contact practice. 
     
    While several factors contributed to the decision to postpone the 2020-21 fall sports season, at the core of our decision was the knowledge that there was too much medical uncertainty and too many unknown health risks regarding SARS-CoV-2 infection and its impact on our student-athletes.
     
    Listed below are the primary factors that led to the Big Ten COP/C decision:
  • Transmission rates continue to rise at an alarming rate with little indication from medical experts that our campuses, communities or country could gain control of the spread of the virus prior to the start of competition.
    • As our teams were ramping up for more intense practices, many of our medical staffs did not think the interventions we had planned would be adequate to decrease the potential spread even with very regular testing.
    • As the general student body comes back to campus, spread to student-athletes could reintroduce infection into our athletics community.
  • There is simply too much we do not know about the virus, recovery from infection, and longer-term effects. While the data on cardiomyopathy is preliminary and incomplete, the uncertain risk was unacceptable at this time.
  • Concerns surrounding contact tracing still exist, including the inability to social distance in contact sports pursuant to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines. While risk mitigation processes (e.g., physical distancing, face coverings, proper hygiene, etc.) can be implemented across campus for the student body population, it became clear those processes could not be fully implemented in contact sports.
    • With the start of full-contact practices and competitions, it became increasingly clear that contact tracing and quarantining would risk frequent and significant disruptions to the practice and competition calendar.
    • Accurate and widely available rapid testing may help mitigate those concerns, but access to accurate tests is currently limited.
    • Significant concerns also exist regarding the testing supply chain, generally, for many of our institutions.

Financial considerations did not influence the COP/C decision, as the postponement will have enormous adverse financial implications. We understand the passion of the many student-athletes and their families who were disappointed by the decision, but also know there are many who have a great deal of concern and anxiety regarding the pandemic.
 
Moving forward, we will continue to build upon the framework that our medical experts have developed over the past five months while we take the opportunity to learn more about the virus and its effects. As we expand upon a plan to allow our student-athletes to compete as soon as it is safe to do so, we will keep our focus on creating protocols and standards set forth and established by our medical advisors that are responsive to the medical concerns evaluated by our COP/C.
 
To that end, the Big Ten Conference has assembled a Return to Competition Task Force consisting of members from the COP/C, sports medicine and university medical personnel, Athletic Directors, Head Coaches, Faculty Athletic Representatives and Senior Women Administrators to plan for the return of fall sports competition as soon as possible. In evaluating winter/spring models, we will explore many factors including the number of football games that can reasonably be played from a health perspective in a full calendar year while maintaining a premier competitive experience for our student-athletes culminating in a Big Ten Championship. The Big Ten Conference will continue to collect feedback from student-athletes, families, and other constituents and remains in active discussions with its television partners regarding all future plans.
 
We have tremendous appreciation and understanding regarding what participation in sports means to our student-athletes, their families, our campus communities and our fans. We will continue to make the best decisions possible for the health, safety and wellness of our student-athletes. We appreciate the passion of the Big Ten community and will harness that energy towards providing the best possible experience for all Big Ten student-athletes.
 
 
Kevin Warren
Commissioner
Big Ten Conference

mlax27

August 19th, 2020 at 6:57 PM ^

Basically just sounds like they did it because some lawyers said they might get sued because we don’t really know how big the risk is.  

Not a fan of having lawyers with this much influence.  It’ll basically create a standard where anything above zero cases is unacceptable and would grind the entire economy to a complete standstill indefinitely and might do more harm than just letting the virus run wild. 
 

I’m ok with delaying or even a full cancel if it truly was medically necessary.  I think the big challenge will be how you determine it’s ok to take the risk and just reopen.  Unfortunately it probably needs to be when cases are above zero.
 

 

NateVolk

August 19th, 2020 at 7:22 PM ^

You are totally out of touch if you think lawyers are behind the fear driving people to not want this virus to spread. That lawyers are behind their fear of getting the virus.

The big challenge is and has been the same for the last 7 months: get this actually under control. And it's a challenge we've cowered before rather than taken head on.  

The formula: having a modern testing system, contact tracing and sufficiency of PPE in the hands of every person who wants it.  That and a social contract signed by the national leader of the country that we all wear a mask in public.

But instead we do basically none of those things for any sustained period, then predictably, cases rise. And we declare it hopeless.

And then start the losing refrain that we all need to accept the risks.

Risks that we breath life into by not doing the work. 

We haven't earned frivolity like organized sports. That is  for countries that have taken this terrible thing seriously. 

 

 

mlax27

August 19th, 2020 at 9:16 PM ^

I understand the virus fear and have very much been a shut it down person.  Still am.  But we failed at shutting it down.  So either shut it down for real this time, or continue forever with this half effort, or learn to live with it.

 

I’d still choose a full shutdown over learn to live with it.  My last choice would be to continue our half efforts, because it’s the worst of both.  Virus won’t go away and we destroy our economy which has more negative effects.  
 

The public fear is not from lawyers.  I think the leadership fears lawyers.  MSU just got obliterated by lawsuits. Suddenly they are the first to quarantine entire teams and send everyone home.  I’ve spoken with numerous  business leaders who are worried about lawsuits from opening up.  That fear is real.  
 

I suspect that the fear of lawsuits (how many large organizations have operated for years), is going to lead to being shut down indefinitely.  That is the worst case scenario to me.  The way the letter was written felt to me like there were lots of lawyers behind it.

Gameboy

August 19th, 2020 at 9:52 PM ^

I just don't get attitudes like this. We have a FRIGGIN IMMUNOLOGIST AS THE PRESIDENT OF THE SCHOOL!!! Do you seriously think he is incapable of determining whether or not having a season is a good idea without lawyers being involved???

I guess people around here don't really put much value in degrees. Which makes me wonder why they even bother following college football...

Mr Miggle

August 20th, 2020 at 8:35 AM ^

Here's when schools should fear lawyers. When the medical authorities advise them not to play and they decide to play anyway. 

Their medical experts tell them not to play and their lawyers tell them they should listen to their medical experts. It's cynical to just say they listened to the lawyers, maybe too cynical. 

Ultimately, they sacrificed a ton of revenue. The money that could have been lost to lawsuits is far less certain. They could have tried to lessen their legal exposure, like through the waivers some players are asking to sign. They could do lobbying for protections.

Personally, I think they were convinced the season was going to be a fiasco if they tried to play. They'd be forced to stop play soon after it started, so it didn't make sense to start.

GoBlueGoWings

August 19th, 2020 at 6:58 PM ^

This is a fine letter Mr. Warren but, I'm going to trust Sir Yacht. If by some chance that his info is off a tad, then the OSU parents protest will change your mind.

B-Nut-GoBlue

August 19th, 2020 at 7:07 PM ^

Does this help the WHERE HAS WARREN BEEN?/WHERE'S MUH TRANSPARENCY? crowds?!

Doubt it.  I don't have a problem with the letter but it was pretty "well, yea, no shit".

UofM Die Hard …

August 19th, 2020 at 7:30 PM ^

This is a great letter, put it to bed and lets move on.  

In relation to the other Tom Mars lawsuit thread, this is what I (im selfish i know) was hoping for..not a season to actually happen.

 

The end, good night sweet price...wake me in 2021, later 2021 

Navy Wolverine

August 19th, 2020 at 8:46 PM ^

The reaction is polar opposite to what you see here.

Force the hands of the big wigs in the B1G.  Just allow players to transfer to the SEC or Big12 without losing a year, and watch how fast football is allowed in the B1G.

This is crap! Doesnt his son play for Miss St?!?!..OSU needs to pull out of the Big Ten righr now! Day needs to just say he stands by his guys and we are playing. NO WAY OSU Has the nuts to fire him...this is politics...

What benefit does the B1G bring to OSU? Do we really think we wouldn't be able to bring in significant cash from TV revenue on our own? Pull a ND and go independent just in football and keep the rest of the sports in the B1G.

Fuck the B1G. Seriously. Its amazing how shitty it is. Join the Big 12. Now.

Bye, Big Ten .... If the Bengals / Browns can play and Ohio HS football can be justified and so can Bearcat football, is there a special strain of Covid-19 that only impacts college players who play for Big Ten universities and bypasses all other football players ??  I'd be looking into some legalities right about now (restraint of trade, etc ....).  Two World Wars, Spanish Flu, etc .... couldn't stop OSU football.  All it took was an undisclosed reason by a very poor conference leader (using the term "leader" very loosely).

azee2890

August 19th, 2020 at 8:59 PM ^

It's because many OSU fan have LITERALLY nothing else to do or live for if they don't have college football. The meaning of some of their lives are so vested in fandom that they are utterly lost without their ability watch a bunch of young adult men smack around the BIG 10 and get smashed by Clemson. I'm glad that a decent amount of this board can think rationally about this situation without feeling like their lives are burning to the ground. 

oriental andrew

August 20th, 2020 at 10:16 AM ^

Wow, there is literally not a single comment on the 11W post about the Warren Open Letter that agrees with postponing football. I thought I'd see at least one, but nope. I mean, I get that Warren handled things poorly, but I honestly believe this was the correct and inevitable outcome. That not a single person over there thinks so is... sad. 

WorldwideTJRob

August 19th, 2020 at 7:45 PM ^

As has been stated before. even with this open letter...Parents/Fans/Players still will not be satisfied with the decision. They will still complain that things are still not transparent enough for them and want more of an explanation. Mr. Warren is in a lose/lose battle here. Nothing he says will give them the necessary satisfaction they crave for canceling  the season.

Doctor Detroit

August 19th, 2020 at 7:52 PM ^

He got much wrong. At a high level .... its the China virus, our medical experts were misinformed by WHO, and they recommended wearing masks by everyone when it was too late for political reasons.

At this point, I agree with one poster. The data is corrupted. My life hasn't changed. I wear a mask so the elderly and people with underlying health conditions are safe. In the meantime. Healthcare workers and essentials keep us moving forward while working inside. Outside is safe. Wear a mask while running, riding a bike. or driving for example if that makes you feel safer. Big deal. And playing politics with masks is all the do nothing party has.

Navy Wolverine

August 19th, 2020 at 8:19 PM ^

I still didn't see anything in Kevin Warren's open letter that addresses the fact that it is ok for his son to play football games for Miss State in the SEC but Big Ten players cannot play games. If the evidence was so compelling then his son should have opted out immediately.

It also does not explain the cancellation of the other fall sports. Why can't they run cross country? My 7th grader is running cross country right now for his middle school and there have been zero issues. What a dumpster fire.

Mr Miggle

August 20th, 2020 at 5:07 AM ^

I'd bet anything that if the decision was up to the commissioner or the ADs, the Big Ten would still be planning to play football this fall. The same as if it were left up to the coaches and players.

The decision was made by people concerned about more than sports and the budgets of the athletic departments. It's the commissioner's role to support their decision in public. That doesn't mean he has to personally agree with it and it certainly doesn't mean he can force his adult son not to play.

ThomasSowell

August 19th, 2020 at 8:53 PM ^

Via Nicole Auerbach’s Twitter 
 

I asked Kevin Warren if his son Powers was practicing and preparing to play at Mississippi State, despite KW's input in the Big Ten's decision not to play. 

Powers is playing. 

"As a family, we’ve had many difficult discussions regarding this issue."

?

https://theathletic.com/2009082/2020/08/19/kevin-warren-big-ten-postponement-backlash-ope-letter/

SFBlue

August 19th, 2020 at 9:29 PM ^

This is both misdirected, and misdirection. Warren himself did not vote in any way at all for any program at all in the B1G. It was not his decision. He is nevertheless responsible for explaining a decision that he, himself, may disagree with. 

Perkis-Size Me

August 19th, 2020 at 9:06 PM ^

TL:DR version:

Sorry OSU. This is one time where the stars aren’t going to align for you. You’re not going to get what you want. You’re going to have to embrace the suck like everyone else has to do. 

Your golden boy Justin Fields is going to learn that sometimes life cheats you out of glory and gives you no apology or silver lining in return. And all the four to five months too late social media petitioning you’re pushing out there won’t change that. 

In other words, you’re going to get a hefty serving of what everyone else in the college football world has gotten at least once, if not more, in the past 20 years. A shit sandwich. And you’re going to shut up and eat it because that’s the hand you were dealt. 

SFBlue

August 19th, 2020 at 9:16 PM ^

This won't be enough for some people, but it should be. Americans struggle to process basic information on science. We are after all these years a nation of people who have not moved much beyond the state of affairs in the Scopes Monkey Trial. 

marineblue

August 19th, 2020 at 9:21 PM ^

NO...means...no...just let it go...if you want football next fall, wear your mask, social distance, treat covid-19 with the respect it deserves, and STFU...simple...do it! football...blah...blah...blah..

MaizeBlueA2

August 19th, 2020 at 11:34 PM ^

It wasn't that difficult.

To think about how stupid, lazy, entitled, privileged, egotistical, and reckless the U.S. has been as a whole...makes me sick.

To think we made a pandemic and health crisis about politics. Unreal.

I've said it before, and I apologize that it can be a little insensitive. Why we didn't rally around this like 9/11 or Pearl Harbor is beyond me.

But unfortunately, we have the most polarizing president in our history and EVERYTHING has to be about politics.

And whatever side you're on, that's your team. I was really hoping we could use a shitty situation like a pandemic to end some of that. 

Wearing a mask should not be controversial. Social distancing is not hard.

Imagine where we'd be if everyone took those two simple steps in January after the President rallied and unified the nation behind kicking COVID's ass.

We'd be in stadiums, bars and at tailgates. That's where we'd be.

Perkis-Size Me

August 20th, 2020 at 6:53 AM ^

I’ve always wondered how much better of a position the US would be in if the president did something that simple. If he’d stepped in front of the cameras and said “Put politics aside for once. We all need to wear a mask, and we all need to socially distance until this is over. Trust our doctors and scientists.” That would’ve trickled down to his base and while of course you’d still have stragglers, I don’t think you’d have anywhere near the problem you have now of people resisting to wear them or distance themselves. There are so many people in this country who take their cues from him and only him as opposed to listening to actual experts. He has that kind of power with them. If he told them to go jump off a bridge tomorrow, some of them might actually do it.   

But of course, ‘twas not meant to be. He had to make everything about politics and all about himself. I don’t know if we’d have football right now, but I know we would at least be seeing a light at the end of the tunnel. 

schizontastic

August 19th, 2020 at 10:09 PM ^

Just to put this out there so there isn’t accusations of goal post moving—

If B12/SEC are going to try to have a season, I genuinely hope they can do it and show that students can be on campus/athletics can happen safely. That would be a great sign for the pandemic as a whole... 

But a successful B12/SEC season doesn’t mean the B10 “was wrong”. 

The B10 made a reasonable decision (I agree with B10). As many on this board know, in medicine, you feel terrible about bad outcomes, but if your decision was reasonable based on careful consideration of the limited information at the time, you can’t say “it was wrong”. 

In fact, the opposite is true, too many clinicians are influence by recency bias and make “incorrect” decisions because they are too heavily influenced by the most recent bad outcome rather than using logic...

TrueBlue2003

August 20th, 2020 at 1:00 AM ^

Was it reasonable for them to have made the decision already?

All this says is that it was based on uncertainty.  So why not wait for clarity when there is literally no downside.  Teams are still practicing. So this decision didn't even change anything as it relates to the risks to participants and the community.

MacMarauder

August 20th, 2020 at 8:53 AM ^

The rest of the world is just fake news and doesn't exist at all. Or maybe they are going along with the COVID lie and closing their economies down to influence the US election.

It doesn't really matter to the "COVID will go away in November" crowd so just pick whatever insane theory you like and roll with it.