Wistrom Disciple Posted August 31, 2020 Share Posted August 31, 2020 4 minutes ago, Mavric said: I think they did take a break but I believe they are back at it now. Confirmed, took two weeks off after decision came down to postpone. Last week was their first week back under the 12 hours rule. 1 Quote Link to comment
Mavric Posted August 31, 2020 Share Posted August 31, 2020 Just now, RedDenver said: How is Nebraska able to practice if we have no games? Is it just a case of nobody is in charge anymore (e.g. NCAA)? The NCAA said teams that are not playing this fall have 12 hours per week of team activities. 5 hours of practice and the rest is meetings and conditioning. 1 Quote Link to comment
RedDenver Posted August 31, 2020 Share Posted August 31, 2020 1 minute ago, Mavric said: The NCAA said teams that are not playing this fall have 12 hours per week of team activities. 5 hours of practice and the rest is meetings and conditioning. Thanks, I hadn't heard that. Quote Link to comment
Huskers93-97 Posted August 31, 2020 Share Posted August 31, 2020 7 minutes ago, Mavric said: The NCAA said teams that are not playing this fall have 12 hours per week of team activities. 5 hours of practice and the rest is meetings and conditioning. Is a scrimmage considered practice? Why not scrimmage against Ohio state ? 1 Quote Link to comment
Mavric Posted August 31, 2020 Share Posted August 31, 2020 1 minute ago, Huskers93-97 said: Is a scrimmage considered practice? Why not scrimmage against Ohio state ? I don't know if there has been a definite answer. There was talk of holding a "spring game" in October but they weren't sure if that was a possibility or not. I'm guessing not a scrimmage against another team, though. Quote Link to comment
Huskers93-97 Posted August 31, 2020 Share Posted August 31, 2020 11 minutes ago, Mavric said: I don't know if there has been a definite answer. There was talk of holding a "spring game" in October but they weren't sure if that was a possibility or not. I'm guessing not a scrimmage against another team, though. I am pretty sure if Nebraska had an internal draft. Created 2 husker teams and had a "scrimmage" every saturday. We would fill the stadium. Quote Link to comment
flatwaterfan Posted August 31, 2020 Share Posted August 31, 2020 41 minutes ago, Huskers93-97 said: I am pretty sure if Nebraska had an internal draft. Created 2 husker teams and had a "scrimmage" every saturday. We would fill the stadium. I had the same thought. I love that idea. I also had a crazy idea of creating a bunch of 8 man football teams from our roster and playing a round robin tournament. That would be fun. 1 Quote Link to comment
Toe Posted August 31, 2020 Share Posted August 31, 2020 8 hours ago, BigRedBuster said: Good thread explaining the subject above. Saying that only 6% died from COVID-19 alone is basically like saying that no one has ever died from AIDS. Technically, AIDS doesn't kill you itself - it wrecks your immune system until it's unable to fight off other infections, and then those other infections kill you. The doctor will note both AIDS and the other infection(s) on the death report. But I think we can all agree that it would be stupid to say that no one has ever died just from AIDS - that's silly. It's technically true, but not very meaningful, and distracts from the real scope of the AIDS epidemic. It's the same thing with pushing that 6% figure - it's pedantic at best, and seriously disingenuous. 8 1 Quote Link to comment
Toe Posted September 1, 2020 Share Posted September 1, 2020 @GBRFAN Do you have a source on what percent are preexisting vs COVID-induced problems (heart issues, etc)? Quote Link to comment
Crusader Husker Posted September 1, 2020 Share Posted September 1, 2020 Has it been mentioned that ALL versions have the flu have the potential to cause Myocarditis? I discussed this with a Infectious disease doc. He said that is true. 1 1 Quote Link to comment
Popular Post FrantzHardySwag Posted September 1, 2020 Popular Post Share Posted September 1, 2020 48 minutes ago, Toe said: @GBRFAN Do you have a source on what percent are preexisting vs COVID-induced problems (heart issues, etc)? The 6% CDC data that people love to parrot, have the two most common co-morbidities listed along with Covid as 1. Pneumonia 2. Respiratory Failure. Both acute problems brought on by Covid. Lots of people love to quote the data, and don't understand the data. 9 2 Quote Link to comment
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