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Post by timholycross on Aug 10, 2020 11:23:22 GMT -5
I thought Trevor Lawrence made great points about them being safer on campus and playing in a controlled environment. Yeah, if you can control the players and coaches inside their individual bubbles. But we're talking about 150-200 people a program and adults not being able to see their families for 4-5 months.
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Post by cmo on Aug 10, 2020 11:31:20 GMT -5
4 months away from family?
Where do I sign up? 😃
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Post by KY Crusader 75 on Aug 10, 2020 15:46:06 GMT -5
4 months away from family? Where do I sign up? 😃 To that point, I think this is one of the best videos of the pandemic era, even better than the doughnut one
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Post by rgs318 on Aug 10, 2020 15:48:12 GMT -5
A taste of "reality" in this day and age.
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Post by timholycross on Aug 10, 2020 17:27:38 GMT -5
"Family time is overrated". Stated by John Madden a few years after he retired from coaching to spend more time with his family.
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Post by hchoops on Aug 11, 2020 11:38:23 GMT -5
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Post by Pakachoag Phreek on Aug 11, 2020 13:02:53 GMT -5
This explains the reference by a sports reporter for the San Jose Mercury News several days ago that the PAC-12 and the Big-10 would act in unison if football season was shutdown. I had thought this was a reference to two German studies that had found a significant percentage of ill COVID patients had cardiac involvement. It would interesting to know if these were linemen and/or African American. _______________________ theforum.sph.harvard.edu/events/when-public-health-means-business-4/This is an hour long, very recent interview with Fauci convened by the Harvard School of Public Health and the New England Journal of Medicine; he starts at the nine minute mark. I know there are posters who have little regard for Fauci, for a host of different reasons, but there are several segments during this interview about the science that are very interesting. Fauci has a few lapses into jargon, but most of it should be understandable. One short segment is a discussion of why young, otherwise healthy adults with no co-morbidities die. Fauci admits he has no answer (one of the young adults cited was a brother of a very close friend, IIRC) He suspects its a genetic susceptibility, and said they are going to find out.
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Post by longsuffering on Aug 11, 2020 13:21:13 GMT -5
This explains the reference by a sports reporter for the San Jose Mercury News several days ago that the PAC-12 and the Big-10 would act in unison if football season was shutdown. I had thought this was a reference to two German studies that had found a significant percentage of ill COVID patients had cardiac involvement. It would interesting to know if these were linemen and/or African American. _______________________ theforum.sph.harvard.edu/events/when-public-health-means-business-4/This is an hour long, very recent interview with Fauci convened by the Harvard School of Public Health and the New England Journal of Medicine; he starts at the nine minute mark. I know there are posters who have little regard for Fauci, for a host of different reasons, but there are several segments during this interview about the science that are very interesting. Fauci has a few lapses into jargon, but most of it should be understandable. One short segment is a discussion of why young, otherwise healthy adults with no co-morbidities die. Fauci admits he has no answer (one of the young adults cited was a brother of a very close friend, IIRC) He suspects its a genetic susceptibility, and said they are going to find out. Not that it matters but I have the highest regard for Dr. Fauci.
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