For many sports fans, autumn weekends revolve around football: Friday night high school, Saturday morning college and Sunday afternoon NFL, until long after the leaves turn.
But the coronavirus pandemic could change that backdrop from fall foliage to spring flowers.
"I'm hoping not. I would prefer that we played in the fall," St. John's coach Gary Fasching said. "But … I think we have to be open-minded."
The idea of pushing the Division I college season to spring surfaced early in the pandemic but faded as optimism grew about the fall. Recently, though, with COVID-19 cases surging nationally and several NCAA programs reporting positive tests, renewed attention has turned to what a spring football season could look like.
"I think the people who say it's not [an option], in my opinion, just don't want to think about it," Oklahoma coach Lincoln Riley told reporters. "… I, for one, think it's very doable."
The Ivy League is reportedly on the verge of pushing its fall sports to the spring, including a football season with a seven-game conference schedule through April and May. The Ivy League was the first to halt sports during the pandemic, and the NCAA as a whole could follow its lead again.
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer recently called for the state's high school league to push fall sports to the spring. Ohio and Tennessee also have reportedly discussed the same.
In Minnesota, however, high school coaches are saying a delayed season isn't ideal.