I am exhausted from the COVID-19 pandemic.
No, I am not going to stop wearing a mask, or taking proper precautions at all times, and neither should you, because this remains a widespread health emergency. No, you’re not going to see me protesting outside Dr. Angela Dunn’s home. Honestly, who has time for that?
Yeah, I’m tired.
To try and make my point, I took a look back at all the stories I wrote across the month of November, which was a real doozy, probably the most-ridiculous month of work since the pandemic began in mid-March.
As you read this Thursday morning, men’s hoops will (allegedly) open this afternoon vs. Washington, while the women, still in quarantine and not sporting a fully-available roster yet, will (allegedly) open Sunday at No. 10 Oregon. I say ‘allegedly’ because, you know, there is still testing to be done, including on the morning of a game, before anyone can play, and that is always an iffy proposition. Just ask the football team.
*Sigh* Keep being safe, keep being smart, keep powering through, because honestly, there really isn’t another option.
What’s on my mind, Utah or otherwise
• Utah is going into its basketball opener this afternoon vs. Washington as at least half a question mark as it continues to work its way back from a COVID outbreak. In terms of depth and preparedness, openers can sometimes be wonky under normal circumstances. Throw in the outbreak, plus the fact this is a conference game for both teams, and things feel a little more unpredictable.
• With Utah set to open, a reminder that the NCAA has mandated that teams need to have played a minimum of 13 games to be eligible for the NCAA Tournament. The Utes are currently slated to play 24, comprised of four nonconference and 20 Pac-12 games. This is going to be an ongoing national subplot. Who can get games in, who can’t, who is in danger of not hitting 13?
• The Las Vegas Bowl was axed earlier this week, so as far as bowl tie-ins go, the Pac-12 is down to the New Year’s Six, Alamo, LA, and Independence bowls. There is plenty of incentive on all sides to get as many bowl games played as possible, but I would expect more to get canceled before it’s all said and done. As far as Utah goes, the Utes need to win out to be bowl-eligible.
• Every passing mention of BYU football seems to turn into a referendum on how good the Cougars are, how bad their schedule is, and whether or not they deserve stronger College Football Playoff consideration. BYU is absolutely good, the hastily-arranged COVID schedule absolutely stinks, and that schedule is not getting it to the CFP. A win at fellow-unbeaten Coastal Carolina on Saturday does not get the Cougars closer to the CFP, but it would certainly bolster their NY6 at-large candidacy.
Your questions
For the 2021 recruiting class, Utah got its No. 1 option at quarterback, four-star Peter Costelli from Mission Viejo (Calif.), and they got him early. Costelli offered a verbal commitment to the Utes on April 11 and is expected to sign his National Letter of Intent next month when the early signing period begins on Dec. 16.
Conventional recruiting thinking says that when you get your top quarterback option, you scale things back with other quarterback options. In the wake of Costelli’s commitment, to say Utah has not recruited, or at least kept tabs on Jaxson Dart, a four-star recruit from Corner Canyon High School who just threw for 4,691 yards, a state-record 67 touchdowns and just four interceptions, is likely incorrect.
With Costelli in the fold, how aggressive Utah is willing to be in pursuing Dart is up for debate, but I’ll say this. Recent history has shown that, if Utah is in need of quarterback help beyond its prep recruiting, it is unafraid to hit the transfer portal, as evidenced by Cameron Rising (Texas) and Jake Bentley (South Carolina).
For starters, I’m willing to bet Utah hosts on Dec. 19. The Utes very likely would have hosted Washington last Saturday had it not been for a TV issue having to do with the holiday week, so let’s assume the Pac-12 gives Utah a “makeup call” on that one and lets it stay home.
As for a Dec. 19 opponent, it’s hard to project as scheduling matters are, as we’ve seen, constantly fluid, but here’s one thought. Don’t rule out a retry between Utah and Arizona, which was supposed to be played Nov. 7 in Salt Lake City. Neither team is going to the Pac-12 title game, so that’s one option that would seem to make sense.
With that out of the way, did the Pac-12 make a mistake? One mistake was, after daily-antigen testing was announced Sept. 3, the league spent too much time celebrating and not enough time planning to start ASAP. I do not fully subscribe to this next point, but some people believe another mistake was not allowing those to play that were ready to play. The season started Nov. 7, but Utah, for example, could have been ready to go on Halloween.
Long view, even with sending a team to the College Football Playoff never looking likely, no, I don’t think the Pac-12 made a mistake by plowing ahead with football. From a financial standpoint, all of these athletic departments are facing eight-figure deficits to their respective fiscal operating budgets. Every football game played is on TV, and every TV appearance helps trim the gap of the deficit.
Yes, money is an enormous factor, if not the decisive factor in all of this. Don’t let anyone tell you different.
Random musings
• I have been stress-eating for the better part of the last month. I should probably stop.
• How am I supposed to do that when my wife’s best friend, who lives in Chicago, just shipped us two frozen deep-dish pizzas from Lou Malnati’s? Feels like a no-win situation.
• One of the best things to ever happen to journalism was Twitter. One of the worst things to ever happen to journalism was Twitter.
• A TV show I never watched one second of while it was new, but have now discovered and am using to decompress late at night: Workaholics, which is funny, smart, stupid, and doesn’t require your brain to be turned on.
December 04, 2020 at 01:07AM
https://www.sltrib.com/sports/utah-utes/2020/12/03/red-all-over-utes-sports/
Red All Over: Ute sports have been brutalized by the pandemic and I am tired of it - Salt Lake Tribune
https://news.google.com/search?q=Red&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en
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