It's clear that the virus raged in Italy, then Spain, and that France was hit hard. The disease came into New York from Italy, as scientists have proven. New York City is a closely interwoven fabric with Fairfield County and northern New Jersey. We here being devastated before we understood what was happening.
But the governors of the Northeast states banded together and enacted shutdowns earlier than most other states. Yes, we were hit hard with hospitalizations and deaths. But the concerted efforts of the states in this region have resulted in rates of new infections in the 1-2% range, with deaths of a dozen or less every day, far less than we've had in the recent past. So the lockdowns have been working.
By contrast, southern and western states have largely ignored pleas from the CDC for stricter measures. Florida and the Carolinas have opened up completely. Meat packing plants in the midwest have proven to be disease vectors. Arizona's infections have put hospitals into emergency mode.
So while the Northeast is now in a position, as is Western Europe, to have surpassed the worst and is looking at a safe reopening, the rest of the nation is seeing an explosion of new infections. So while western Europe is largely safe (except Sweden), America as a whole is suffering 20,000 new infections a week.
So the problem for college sports is that our division I programs are regional and national in nature, and football can't function if Penn State has to travel to Texas-Austin to play a game and risk serious infection. Women basketball players might be relatively safe in Storrs, but would put themselves at great risk if they were to play at Duke, or South Carolina, or travel to Tennessee.
That's the danger. If only we had all coordinated and were emerging from this viral nightmare at the same time...