Blue White Illustrated

August 2020

Penn State Sports Magazine

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what we anticipate might be coming, pay reductions are probably unavoid- able." As the department's revenues are de- clining, some expenses are rising. One of the new expenses that schools are facing is the cost of testing athletes for COVID, a necessary precaution if ath- letics of any kind are going to take place anytime soon. Earlier this summer, the football, men's and women's basketball, men's and women's soccer and women's volleyball teams returned to campus to begin working out. As of July 29, Penn State had conducted 466 tests on stu- dent-athletes. The athletic depart- ment's protocol for the summer called for athletes and staff to be tested upon their arrival in University Park and, if they leave, to be tested upon their re- turn. Also, athletes and staff are to be tested if they exhibit symptoms of COVID. The in-season safety protocols will re- quire even more testing. The NCAA Sport Science Institute issued guide- lines in mid-July aimed at helping schools return to competition. One of the recommendations was that all ath- letes in high-contact sports be tested at some point in the three days leading up to a game. On a more hopeful note for Penn State, the university has gotten some help handing another unexpected ex- pense. Barbour said that donors have stepped up to defray the cost of offering another year of scholarship aid to senior student-athletes in the spring sports whose careers would otherwise have been cut short by the pandemic. The NCAA opted to grant those athletes an extra year of eligibility, and Barbour said that 20 to 25 Penn State seniors have chosen to return in 2021. She esti- mated the cost of that extra scholarship aid at between $600,000 and $700,000. "Obviously, that's not a small feat in this really, really difficult time," she said. "But our donors, our passionate Penn Staters, have stepped up and completely funded that cost for us and helped out in our time of need." ■ ver since Penn State upset Ohio State four years ago, setting up a Big Ten championship run and a return to national prominence, the Nittany Lions' ultimate goal has been to compete in the College Football Playo;. That didn't happen in 2016, even a=er the victory over the Buck- eyes and a win vs. Wisconsin in the Big Ten Championship Game. True to their modern era legacy as all-too-frequent bridesmaids, the Lions were :=h in the CFP rankings coming out of the con- ference title games and were le= to wonder what it would take to play for the national championship. Since 1968, its third season under Joe Paterno, Penn State has produced :ve undefeated teams, but only one of those teams :nished No. 1 in the polls. That was the 1986 squad, which de- feated Miami, 14-10, in the Fiesta Bowl to cap a 12-0 season and claim the pro- gram's second national title. That history helps explain why so many Penn State football fans were unsurprised when the Nittany Lions didn't make the four-team CFP :eld a=er their Big Ten title. PSU also came close in 2017 and again last season, going 11-2 both years and :nishing with top-10 rankings. But if there was any disappointment over the team's failure to secure a playo; spot either year, it was tempered by the realization that the Lions had only themselves to blame for coming up short. In 2017, it appeared that Penn State was poised to break through. The Nit- tany Lions were leading Ohio State, 35- 20, early in the fourth quarter of their visit to Columbus and had just recov- ered a fumble at the Buckeyes' 42-yard line. A :eld goal would have given them a three-score lead with less than 10 minutes to play, and a victory would have put them in the driver's seat for a spot in the Big Ten Championship Game and a shot at the College Foot- ball Playo;. But instead, Penn State collapsed in the :nal eight minutes of the game and ended up losing to the Buckeyes, 39-38, and playing in the Fi- esta Bowl against Washington. Last year, PSU went into its game against Minnesota on Nov. 9 sporting an 8-0 record and the No. 4 ranking in the :rst CFP poll of the season. But the Lions played their worst game of the season, losing to the Golden Gophers, 31-26, and falling out of contention for the playo;. This year, it's hard to know what to make of the Lions' playo; chances, since the pandemic forced the Big Ten in July to radically alter its plans for the season. League o

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