glastonbury50
You Enjoy Myself
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- Jan 21, 2018
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If not I want my $35 back that i paid for a season ticket.
Wasn’t the Georgia governor just on TV saying he didn’t realize asymptotic carriers was a thing? We may be okay up here by summer but the rest of the country is loony. Then we get hit when people from hard hit areas “flee” (see: bring with them) the virus and come to the northeast. It’s just so damn annoying with the half measures. I have no idea why planes are still flying. There’s no weddings no funerals nowhere is open and no business that can’t be done remotely. Same goes for people who got on cruise ships like March 10th and are now stranded. What the hell did you think was going to happen? Sorry for the rant.My guess is a shorter season. Start mid-late September. And play10 games.
Here is the thing. To date this has been largely but not exclusively a Coastal issue but is now spreading inland. And it has been addressed differently in different regions too. So it is possible that while the peak in NY might be reached in April/May that might not be true in Georgia for example where Atlanta is just now seeing the kind of expansion we saw in March. So they might not peak until June-July. Or some other states where little to no action is being taken to slow the spread might be dealing with this even later. Then how do you send a team to Mississippi when it isn’t under control there or host one from Tennessee if it is still raging there? Honestly I’m less concerned about those later games but used them to illustrate what could occur. BTW the NFL is concerned about the same issue. What if Dallas is still under quarantine in September but Boston is not? How do you run a league? How do you run pre-season even? UConn and the Pats can have preseason but Houston and Ol’ Miss cannot?
Was it Tennessee where the legislature passed a bill to overturn actions by Mayors of some larger cities to close businesses? And of course Senator RonJohnson from Wisconsin told the Milwaukee paper that it wouldn’t be that bad. Worst case “ only” 1-3% of the population would die. The other 97-99 % would carry on. It didn’t occur to that dope that 1-3% of the US Population would be 3-11 MILLION people. Some of these guys don’t have the brains of a rock. Sorry. But you got me started!Wasn’t the Georgia governor just on TV saying he didn’t realize asymptotic carriers was a thing? We may be okay up here by summer but the rest of the country is loony. Then we get hit when people from hard hit areas “flee” (see: bring with them) the virus and come to the northeast. It’s just so damn annoying with the half measures. I have no idea why planes are still flying. There’s no weddings no funerals nowhere is open and no business that can’t be done remotely. Same goes for people who got on cruise ships like March 10th and are now stranded. What the hell did you think was going to happen? Sorry for the rant.
"The next wave" doesn't have to and most likely would not look like the one occurring now.No season. All it takes is one non-symptomatic positive case to kickstart the next wave.
I'd be surprised if kids are on campus in the fall.
In the McMurphy “hey what-if” article:Question, and maybe someone addressed this already so my apologies in advance...If they do go to a modified season with conference games only, how does that affect UConn and the other handful of Independents where all of their games are of the non conference kind? We’d get shut out of our entire schedule? Save for if we’re playing another independent?
As always, thanks MedicIn the McMurphy “hey what-if” article:
>>But what about the seven independents, specifically Notre Dame? How would they schedule matchups in a conference-only format? What happens to the Army-Navy Game?
The easiest way to do the conference-only schedule might be allowing each school nine “conference” games. The SEC could add another conference game without any issues, while the ACC could have nine schools play Notre Dame and have it count as a conference opponent. The other five ACC league members could each schedule another independent (Army, BYU, UConn, UMass, Liberty or New Mexico State) to get its ninth game.
The independents would have to be very creative with their schedules to get to nine games, perhaps playing some sort of round-robin schedule.<<
"The next wave" doesn't have to and most likely would not look like the one occurring now.
1. Larger amounts of testing and increased efficacy of treatments stamp out small clusters before they grow into larger-scale spread.
2. It stands to reason that the more severe strains of the virus will not last as long as the less severe strains. Unfortunately, those severe strains are more likely to result in the death of their host and/or a hospitalization of the host, thereby removing them from social contact.
3. The more people who have already and will recover from prior infections increases the amount of immunity among the general population. It also increases the amount of antibodies that can be used as treatments.