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247sports.com
Not even a month after announcing it would not be playing football this fall, the Big Ten is looking at options to take the field in the next few months. On Friday,
news began to leak that the Big Ten was looking at different possibilities that would allow them to play football earlier in the year than a spring season.
The reports stated that the Big Ten was eying starting its 2020 football season on Thanksgiving week. If that were to be the case, the league could finish its season in time to ensure a full 12-game schedule in 2021.
On his Friday night edition of SportsCenter, host Scott Van Pelt was highly critical of that thought. Van Pelt said that the Big Ten starting a season as the normal college football season was coming to a close would be, “nonsense.”
“This week, eight Nebraska players filed a lawsuit to try to overturn the Big Ten’s decision to cancel the season,”
Van Pelt said. “But unfortunately, lawsuits and parents writing letters and the President (Donald Trump) tweeting aren’t gonna get us Big Ten football this fall, but maybe Thanksgiving. I can’t say this more clearly; this is nonsense.
“How the hell are you gonna not play in the fall but start in November at Thanksgiving, while the season with teams who are going to start in September is still going and it’s marching towards its playoff? Just think it through. You can’t do that. ‘No, no no, no, no, see, we’re playing for the Old Oaken Bucket and Floyd of Rosedale and Paul Bunyan’s Axe.’ Cool, have fun with a pig trophy. We’re playing for the championship trophy, you know? You can’t start the season with the other one coming down to its most important games. You would be taunting yourself.”
The Big Ten announced on August 11 that it was not going to be playing football on the normal fall schedule and would rather be looking to play in the spring. The Pac-12 followed the Big Ten’s lead, while the Big 12, ACC and SEC are all pushing forward with seasons that are scheduled to kick off in the next few weeks.
Van Pelt mentioned that if the Big Ten wanted to play this fall still, it should eye starting in late September like other conferences. However, he had some criticism for school presidents after suggesting that.
“Why not play in late September, when everyone else does, if you’re going to try to start at Thanksgiving? I don't think it would happen though, because the presidents in the Big Ten who shot down the season in the first place would have to okay it,”
Van Pelt said. “Meanwhile, if they couldn’t play because they were worried about lawsuits, how did you allow all these students to come back to campus and go to school? Oh, right, right, so you can charge them the full boat for the semester. That’s a fun trick.”