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It Is Done
Comments
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Losing to a bay area team whose entire offensive line is not there is so last year.NEsnake12 said:I get the vibe that it’s something dramatic like Cal’s entire offensive line is being held out, which is more understandable as to why they canceled the game
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If he's afraid to play Cal or anybody then we? don't want him hereDoogWhisperer said:It sucks that there won't be a game but I bet Jimmy loves it. He doesn't have to play against Cal and instead starts with the Beavers. I wouldn't underestimate Smiff, though.
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FREE PUB!!!111!!!FecalFeast said: -
Once again, NO! A cancelled game does not create a W or a L for either team. Your regular season is just one game shorter.GrundleStiltzkin said:Poor @DefinitelyNotCoker in the bargaining phase
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Quite honestly @rodmansrage, we don’t deal with hypotheticals.rodmansrage said:
imagine the p12 doing anything competent.Canadawg said:Why didn't the pac get all the local health authorities on the same page
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Wilner thinks its Cal's entireOL being held out:whatshouldicareabout said:
So they tested everyone, confirmed no one else has the virus, and still forces them to be in 14-day quarantine? Because they don't have the virus?
I'd love to see the rationale behind that decision.
The incubation period for Covid is typically a few days, but there according to the CDC it can be up to 14 days. In other words they think a person can test negative for 14 days after contracting the virus, but actually have it, and I presume be contagious. I'm very skeptical of the 14 day number, but I'm sure that's the health district's underlying rationale.
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/symptoms/flu-vs-covid19.htm
The bigger question here is why didn't the Pac-12:
1) Start earlier in the year as planned to give teams more room to move games around.
2) Coordinate with local authorities
3) Know all these regulations and help teams plan for when a positive test happens
And why didn't Cal take any precautions given these rules as well? Did they not know what was going to happen as soon as there was a positive case? For fuck's sake, why couldn't they split up their meetings or something? This wasn't practice-related close contact, because if that was the issue more of the team would be held out, but it has been reported that it is only a single position group. -
Good questions, and ones that have been answered by Wilner. I poasted about it this morning in a new thread. Cal did coordinate with local authorities, players were separated and socially distanced, the positive was caught early and quarantined, all of it. But the City of Berkeley Public Health Authority has essentially overruled what was previously discussed.Woof said:
Wilner thinks its Cal's entireOL being held out:whatshouldicareabout said:
So they tested everyone, confirmed no one else has the virus, and still forces them to be in 14-day quarantine? Because they don't have the virus?
I'd love to see the rationale behind that decision.
The incubation period for Covid is typically a few days, but there according to the CDC it can be up to 14 days. In other words they think a person can test negative for 14 days after contracting the virus, but actually have it, and I presume be contagious. I'm very skeptical of the 14 day number, but I'm sure that's the health district's underlying rationale.
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/symptoms/flu-vs-covid19.htm
The bigger question here is why didn't the Pac-12:
1) Start earlier in the year as planned to give teams more room to move games around.
2) Coordinate with local authorities
3) Know all these regulations and help teams plan for when a positive test happens
And why didn't Cal take any precautions given these rules as well? Did they not know what was going to happen as soon as there was a positive case? For fuck's sake, why couldn't they split up their meetings or something? This wasn't practice-related close contact, because if that was the issue more of the team would be held out, but it has been reported that it is only a single position group.
https://hardcorehusky.com/discussion/78064/to-clarify-fucking-berkeley#latest -
Ok. In that case, fuck Berkeley. That is way way dumber than I expected.DoogCourics said:
Good questions, and ones that have been answered by Wilner. I poasted about it this morning in a new thread. Cal did coordinate with local authorities, players were separated and socially distanced, the positive was caught early and quarantined, all of it. But the City of Berkeley Public Health Authority has essentially overruled what was previously discussed.Woof said:
Wilner thinks its Cal's entireOL being held out:whatshouldicareabout said:
So they tested everyone, confirmed no one else has the virus, and still forces them to be in 14-day quarantine? Because they don't have the virus?
I'd love to see the rationale behind that decision.
The incubation period for Covid is typically a few days, but there according to the CDC it can be up to 14 days. In other words they think a person can test negative for 14 days after contracting the virus, but actually have it, and I presume be contagious. I'm very skeptical of the 14 day number, but I'm sure that's the health district's underlying rationale.
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/symptoms/flu-vs-covid19.htm
The bigger question here is why didn't the Pac-12:
1) Start earlier in the year as planned to give teams more room to move games around.
2) Coordinate with local authorities
3) Know all these regulations and help teams plan for when a positive test happens
And why didn't Cal take any precautions given these rules as well? Did they not know what was going to happen as soon as there was a positive case? For fuck's sake, why couldn't they split up their meetings or something? This wasn't practice-related close contact, because if that was the issue more of the team would be held out, but it has been reported that it is only a single position group.
https://hardcorehusky.com/discussion/78064/to-clarify-fucking-berkeley#latest -
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