Do y'all think this will impact next football seasons attendance? I'm of the opinion that it really will.
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Do y'all think this will impact next football seasons attendance? I'm of the opinion that it really will.
Interesting question. I think it’ll probably depend on how prevalent it is at the time. It might be more of a factor later in the season when the weather cools down. The students won’t care about it one way or the other.
I think if it peaks/passes by football season I think attendance will be better because we've lost so much sports. And in theory our fans that would have spent money on baseball/maybe Omaha/the women's NCAA Tournament/Men's NIT (Yes, let's all be honest here they were going to screw it up the SEC Tournament and we all knew that was going to happen deep down inside) will have the money to spend on football.
There are always other factors too such as how the team is doing, confidence in the program, how good the product is on and off the field in the stands with concessions and things like that which I fully expect to improve over last year. We also have a new coach that everyone is excited about and so I think people were going to come and attendance was going to increase initially regardless.
If we have a really good season we could set whatever bowl attendance records this year.
All depends on the timing & what the current outlook is at that time.
I think at some point everyone will become fatigued by this unless deaths start to hit close to home
It’ll be almost forgotten by then.
People will be excited to get out to see sports again.
Trump said today we may be dealing with these issues till possibly August.....
.....when asked how long the new normal will be in place. Trump stated
"We'll see what happens but they think August, could be July." Trump told reporters at the White House, "Could be longer than that."
Much like in China, I will be very interested to see what happen with the "suggested quarantine" is lifted here. With how contagious this virus it wouldn't suprise me if this blew up again for a Round 2 when everyone gets back out into the public. Of course, at least a portion of the population would have some kind of immunity at that point.
The main issue is that here is that this is an untenable situation for the economy.
Sure, we can shut things down for a week or two, but after that, when nobody is getting paid, people will have to choose the risk of getting the virus over losing their business or not being able to pay their rent or mortgage.
With all these bars, restaurants, etc closing down right now, who is going to pay the rent or mortgage for those properties? If the land lord offers a grace period, then who is going to pay the bank? etc, etc, etc.
Point being, you can't just stop the world for too long. We are all too interconnected for things to just completely shut down for an extended period of time.
This shut down has much less to do with flattening the curve as it does buying the medical field time to prepare and/or find a solution
We'll be playing football by the Fall because they world will have moved on by then whether the virus is still a threat or not. It has too
I am going to say no. By June 1st it will have subsided and will be an afterthought.
This is valid. As I have stated before, I don't think there is any real way to completely erradicate this virus so it will become endemic to the world population. The thing here is that if a vaccine is created or herd immunity is accomplished then how does it mutate to survive? Evolution says it will get MORE contagious but less severe. Dangerous viruses usually have relatively short lifespans on the world stage because they burn their hosts out and then have nowhere to go.
CFB attendance is already trending down and I think this will hurt it further. The virus will likely not be gone by opening weekend and elderly/immuno compromised folks will stay home more.
to much money will have been lost by then if this trend keeps up ...... they will play
I'm guessing it's seasonal like most respiratory illnesses. Hopefully gone by summer. Maybe that's why Africa has almost no COVID.
Well your guessing is incorrect. It’s confirmed in 24 African countries and actively spreading. And if you don’t think we’re testing enough folks, and I don’t, Africa doesn’t have the means to test anywhere near our capability. This is a worldwide virus that is not seasonal. This is not a flu virus. I can’t say that loud enough. The Dr on Rogan and numerous other Drs have said it’s not seasonal.
Guess we'll see. Right now this is what we know.... Africa, tiny circles.
https://i-insider-com.cdn.ampproject...jpeg&auto=webp
Again, how many test you think Africa is conducting? But that’s an aside. It’s spread to 24 Africa an countries so it’s spreading despite temperature. It’s not seasonal.
Then why are you so triggered? Im headed out to get a milkshake.
See ya in the funny papers.
https://y.yarn.co/c8d57d39-a63f-49ec...screenshot.jpg
The US can only Hunker Down so long....
Flattening yhe curve and the hospital situation are the exact same thing. The curve cannot surpass our medical capabilities. Hell if no one was dying, it would be business as always. Snotty nose doesn't care if its allergies or some other non-life threatening thing.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/...ronavirus.html
Per Harvard, We better hope it is not "over" by the fall.
Or we will have 100,000's of thousands dead. We don't have the Hospital or ICU beds for 6 month peak if only 20% of the US population gets it. Which experts think is low.
https://projects.propublica.org/grap...ovid-hospitals
I don't know how our economy is going to handle it. But something has to give.
Also, a vaccine is a year to 18 months away....
https://www.pharmaceutical-technolog...e-development/
Quote:
It will likely take at least a year for a Covid-19 vaccine to be approved and made available to patients;
So are you implying that at a given time 20% of the population will have it all at the same time OR over the course of 6 months 20% of people may contract it and truthfully, the majority won't require hospitalization but will have contracted the virus?
That's a very vague number and hypothetical stat. See below.
"Even in a best-case scenario, with cases of coronavirus spread out over 18 months, American hospital beds would be about 95% full. (This assumes that hospitals don?t free up already occupied beds or add more beds, as some elected officials have called for.) Some regions would have the capacity to handle the surge in hospitalizations without adding new beds or displacing other patients."
https://projects.propublica.org/grap...vid-hospitals/
So the stats are based off no one recovering and opening a bed for a new patient to move in and also NO new beds being added to what we have currently.
https://i-insider-com.cdn.ampproject...jpeg&auto=webp
I don't trust any map that has 2 Africas on it*
Here's something scary. I watched something on the flu pandemic of 1918 that talked about how that flu strain mutated in the summer and came back worse in the fall.
If hunkered down means working from home and all my kids there, I think I'll survive. Damn sure beats traveling all over all the time and that two hours of driving to the office. How about people use the time to do things at home with family and enjoy it? Life doesn't slow down. You better take advantage when it does.
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