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COVID fatigue

HawkNorth

HB All-State
Nov 24, 2003
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Interesting article from the MPLS Star-Tribune about how COVID layoffs have affected teams performances after postponements (like the Iowa-Indiana game) from a Gopher perspective. It seems to apply to everybody in the B1G.

Gophers men's basketball had momentum — and then came a COVID pause out of its control
One postponement derailed the U in a season that's been disjointed for many.

By Marcus Fuller Star Tribune
February 4, 2021 — 1:20am

In the University of Minnesota's COVID-19 testing facility last week, Richard Pitino saw his 7-footer Liam Robbins walking by with the same sour mood as his head coach.

As usual, nobody was thrilled to be up early for the daily tests, but they were even more annoyed by waiting a full week to play after a tough loss.

"There's nothing fun about it," Pitino said of the daily routine, "but we're still grateful."

The Gophers played six games last month, their fewest in a January since 1973. It began as arguably the most successful January of the Pitino era. Three wins vs. ranked foes. The month ended, though, with back-to-back losses to unranked opponents.

Entering Thursday's game at Rutgers, the Gophers (11-6, 4-6 Big Ten) are still trying to regain the momentum they lost after not playing right after their impressive win Jan. 16 over top-10 Michigan at Williams Arena.

The Gophers were scheduled to play at Nebraska four days later — an excellent chance for Minnesota's first road win — but the game was postponed because of the Cornhuskers' COVID issues. And what followed were disappointing blowout losses to Maryland and Purdue.

Gophers 2020-21 schedule, results

"Momentum is big in sports," Pitino said. "When you beat a Michigan and you don't have the rush and thrill of victory [in front of fans] in your building. And then all of a sudden Nebraska gets canceled. It is what it is this year. It's just so very unique and different this year."

Michigan is the latest to experience just how different this season has been with its entire athletic department now on a two-week COVID-19 pause, including the Big Ten-leading men's basketball team.

The Wolverines joined Nebraska, Michigan State and Penn State in becoming the fourth men's hoops program to pause during Big Ten play. Every team in the league now has had games postponed as a result.

The Gophers aren't alone in struggling to play well after losing a scheduled game because of COVID-19. Big Ten teams were 7-9 entering Wednesday in their first game back after postponements. Some teams needed the break, but others looked completely out of sorts.

Michigan State, a struggling perennial power, lost by 30 points at Rutgers in its first game in 20 days after a three-game hiatus.

Rutgers had a three-game losing streak, when Penn State couldn't play on Jan. 12. The Scarlet Knights lost two more games after that postponement, but they regrouped to win three in a row entering Thursday's game vs. the Gophers.

Pitino tried to keep his team engaged last month with only four games during a 21-day span, but the daily testing, distance learning and basic separation from the outside world took its toll.

"Guys are very isolated," Pitino said. "Practice is kind of the same. It's kind of monotonous for them. So when you don't have a lot of games in a certain amount of time, it's definitely something where mentally, we're trying to keep our guys positive, encouraged and enthusiastic about some great opportunities in front of us."

When asked recently about how well the Gophers played to beat Michigan 75-57 on Jan. 16, Pitino said it was hard for him to remember much. To him and his team, "it feels like a year ago."

That was the Gophers' most complete game of the season. They got solid contributions from Robbins and standout junior point guard Marcus Carr. They were the first team to beat the Wolverines this season, forcing 20 turnovers and holding them to 39% shooting.

A week later, Minnesota was almost unrecognizable in a 63-49 loss to Maryland, its first home loss. Players lacked energy. The Gophers were held to their lowest-scoring home game since 2016.

The effort was better Saturday after another long break before the game at Purdue, but the same offensive ineptitude surfaced in the second-half meltdown of a 19-point loss.

"I don't believe the confidence level in our team has dropped," senior forward Brandon Johnson said. "I just believe we've hit a rough patch in the road. I've seen many teams across the country go through the same thing. That's college basketball."
 
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Luckily all of the sudden the dreaded Covid numbers are miraculously going down across the country-

Why ARE coronavirus cases falling so fast in the US? New infections drop 44% over last three weeks | Daily Mail Online



Stunning!
 
I assume I have just been mostly naive for the last 59 yrs but it sure seems to me that there is going to be a lot of space in heaven vs hell with the way people lie, cheat and steal these days.
I am frankly stunned to see how easily people will bold faced lie in front of millions of people and then double down and keep right on going.
 
Interesting article from the MPLS Star-Tribune about how COVID layoffs have affected teams performances after postponements (like the Iowa-Indiana game) from a Gopher perspective. It seems to apply to everybody in the B1G.

Gophers men's basketball had momentum — and then came a COVID pause out of its control
One postponement derailed the U in a season that's been disjointed for many.

By Marcus Fuller Star Tribune
February 4, 2021 — 1:20am

In the University of Minnesota's COVID-19 testing facility last week, Richard Pitino saw his 7-footer Liam Robbins walking by with the same sour mood as his head coach.

As usual, nobody was thrilled to be up early for the daily tests, but they were even more annoyed by waiting a full week to play after a tough loss.

"There's nothing fun about it," Pitino said of the daily routine, "but we're still grateful."

The Gophers played six games last month, their fewest in a January since 1973. It began as arguably the most successful January of the Pitino era. Three wins vs. ranked foes. The month ended, though, with back-to-back losses to unranked opponents.

Entering Thursday's game at Rutgers, the Gophers (11-6, 4-6 Big Ten) are still trying to regain the momentum they lost after not playing right after their impressive win Jan. 16 over top-10 Michigan at Williams Arena.

The Gophers were scheduled to play at Nebraska four days later — an excellent chance for Minnesota's first road win — but the game was postponed because of the Cornhuskers' COVID issues. And what followed were disappointing blowout losses to Maryland and Purdue.

Gophers 2020-21 schedule, results

"Momentum is big in sports," Pitino said. "When you beat a Michigan and you don't have the rush and thrill of victory [in front of fans] in your building. And then all of a sudden Nebraska gets canceled. It is what it is this year. It's just so very unique and different this year."

Michigan is the latest to experience just how different this season has been with its entire athletic department now on a two-week COVID-19 pause, including the Big Ten-leading men's basketball team.

The Wolverines joined Nebraska, Michigan State and Penn State in becoming the fourth men's hoops program to pause during Big Ten play. Every team in the league now has had games postponed as a result.

The Gophers aren't alone in struggling to play well after losing a scheduled game because of COVID-19. Big Ten teams were 7-9 entering Wednesday in their first game back after postponements. Some teams needed the break, but others looked completely out of sorts.

Michigan State, a struggling perennial power, lost by 30 points at Rutgers in its first game in 20 days after a three-game hiatus.

Rutgers had a three-game losing streak, when Penn State couldn't play on Jan. 12. The Scarlet Knights lost two more games after that postponement, but they regrouped to win three in a row entering Thursday's game vs. the Gophers.

Pitino tried to keep his team engaged last month with only four games during a 21-day span, but the daily testing, distance learning and basic separation from the outside world took its toll.

"Guys are very isolated," Pitino said. "Practice is kind of the same. It's kind of monotonous for them. So when you don't have a lot of games in a certain amount of time, it's definitely something where mentally, we're trying to keep our guys positive, encouraged and enthusiastic about some great opportunities in front of us."

When asked recently about how well the Gophers played to beat Michigan 75-57 on Jan. 16, Pitino said it was hard for him to remember much. To him and his team, "it feels like a year ago."

That was the Gophers' most complete game of the season. They got solid contributions from Robbins and standout junior point guard Marcus Carr. They were the first team to beat the Wolverines this season, forcing 20 turnovers and holding them to 39% shooting.

A week later, Minnesota was almost unrecognizable in a 63-49 loss to Maryland, its first home loss. Players lacked energy. The Gophers were held to their lowest-scoring home game since 2016.

The effort was better Saturday after another long break before the game at Purdue, but the same offensive ineptitude surfaced in the second-half meltdown of a 19-point loss.

"I don't believe the confidence level in our team has dropped," senior forward Brandon Johnson said. "I just believe we've hit a rough patch in the road. I've seen many teams across the country go through the same thing. That's college basketball."

Speaking of fatigue, think about Michigan State & Little Debbie. They are /will be coming off huge lay offs; they can't be in game shape, at all. And I wonder if covid complications makes any player(s) short of breath in the short term.

And then MSU & Debbie are gonna have to cram make up games into the last month of the season. It's gonna really be a grind for them.

Can you believe the regular season ends in 31 days?
 
Luckily all of the sudden the dreaded Covid numbers are miraculously going down across the country-

Why ARE coronavirus cases falling so fast in the US? New infections drop 44% over last three weeks | Daily Mail Online



Stunning!
So, why did this shit ass post stick around? As political as anything else I've seen. GFY and crawl back to your cave, Trump troll.
 
I assume I have just been mostly naive for the last 59 yrs but it sure seems to me that there is going to be a lot of space in heaven vs hell with the way people lie, cheat and steal these days.
I am frankly stunned to see how easily people will bold faced lie in front of millions of people and then double down and keep right on going.
The GOP to the T.
 
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Reactions: littlez
people are still wearing masks despite the death statistic of mask wearers? WTF
 
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