• Loading stock data...
Thursday, November 6, 2025
Tune in Nov. 12 at 1 p.m. ET for Future of Sports: Stadium Sophistication. Register now

Old Dominion’s Decision to Break From Conference, Sit Out Football

  • While Conference USA wades through multiple football game postponements because of COVID-19 safety concerns, Old Dominion is waiting out the pandemic until next fall.
  • Athletic director Wood Selig spoke with Front Office Sports about why he originally decided to postpone football, and why he isn’t changing his mind.
old-dominion-postpones-football
Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports

Old Dominion athletic director Wood Selig feels relieved. In fact, more than that, he feels “very comfortable, and very satisfied, content with where we are.”

That’s because Old Dominion football is the only FBS program that broke from its conference’s decision to play during the pandemic. While Conference USA wades through multiple game postponements because of COVID-19 safety concerns, Old Dominion, one of its members, is only practicing this year and won’t play any games until next fall.

Selig spoke with Front Office Sports about why he originally decided to postpone the season, and why he isn’t changing his mind.

Over the summer, Selig kept in constant communication with Conference USA officials, as well as his own coaches and athletes. On Aug. 10, Old Dominion announced its decision to postpone, which Selig described as almost unanimous. “I’m not saying that our athletes and coaches did not want to compete,” Selig said. “They understood the safety-first driving force behind the decision.”

Just a few days earlier, however, Conference USA announced its decision to play. Selig said Conference USA Commissioner Judy MacLeod was “very understanding” of the school’s postponement, and made Selig feel like he could make the best decision for his program, regardless of the conferences’ plans. “We are comprised of 14 schools who are located in three time zones and across nine different states,” Selig said of Conference USA. “So what may work in Houston, Texas, or in El Paso, or Huntington, West Virginia, may not work in Norfolk, Virginia,” where Old Dominion is located.

Old Dominion won’t play football until fall 2021, Selig said. The program could lose between $3 and $5 million in football-related revenue as a result, though Selig did say he’s working with donors, season ticket holders, and sponsors to see what revenue his school could still capture without a season. And he doesn’t know whether his program will receive media rights payouts from Conference USA, which currently has a hodgepodge of deals with broadcasters like CBS Sports Network and ESPN.

Despite this, the department hasn’t had to implement furloughs or layoffs, unlike many other Division I departments nationwide. In fact, the school will even save some money without playing football, Selig said, and could dip into a reserve fund if needed.

What did factor into the postponement, however, was the explosion of COVID-19 cases nationwide over the summer, and a consultation with local health officials where Old Dominion is located, Selig said. Athletic officials were concerned that young athletes could serve as “vectors” to spread the disease to more vulnerable populations, such as their own parents, grandparents or other high-risk friends or family, and that of lack of testing capabilities and the unknown long-term health impacts of COVID-19 put everyone at risk.

Over the summer, Old Dominion had access to testing through local hospitals, but Selig was concerned that overloading local facilities with athletic department tests that the others in the community might need would have been “selfish.” Selig also felt that testing accuracy posed problems, and that only time will allow testing companies to improve their products. 

fbs-independents-remain-divided

FBS Conferences Will Play Fall Football, Independents Remain Divided

FBS independent programs, who faced their own unique challenges, reached diverging decisions…
October 7, 2020

Due to both testing concerns and COVID-19 cases, teams in Conference USA like Rice and Charlotte have already endured the game postponements that Selig was afraid his program might be subject to if they played this fall. This still is a very inaccurate process, and it’s a lot of make-it-up as you go along,” he said. 

Old Dominion currently doesn’t have a daily testing plan like the Big Ten or Pac-12, for example, but it has obtained testing capabilities within its university. Currently, the program randomly tests 100 athletes a week as they practice on campus, so that every athlete gets tested about once a month. Conference USA is “exploring” options for a conference-wide testing plan, Selig said. And his program has a plan for monitoring cardiac health for athletes who test positive.

For competition in the winter and spring, Selig feels Old Dominion will be able to meet whatever protocols the NCAA mandates, but was clear that over the summer he didn’t feel testing capabilities would allow for a “meaningful” season for athletes in the fall.

Given the scheduling complications and postponed games even those in his own conference have faced due to COVID-19, Selig doesn’t regret his decision or want to reverse it. What’s more, he said it would be extremely difficult to put together a schedule at this point anyway.

“There’s still so much uncertainty, and we just felt that for our 18- to 22-year-olds, uncertainty is not a good thing,” Selig said. “They’ve got a lot of uncertainty going on in their lives right now. We didn’t want to add to the uncertainty with intercollegiate athletics. We felt if we make a definitive decision and stick by it, at least that’s going to be maybe a new constant in their life.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Nov 1, 2025; College Park, Maryland, USA; Indiana Hoosiers running back Solomon Vanhorse (18) rushes during the half quarter against the Maryland Terrapins at SECU Stadium.

CFP Rankings Show How Complicated Prize Money Shift Could Play Out

Conferences will still get paid big this year for their champions.

YouTube TV Loss Weighs on ABC’s CFB Ratings While Fox Sees Lift

Oklahoma-Tennessee drew just 4.8 million Saturday night.

CFP Rankings Show Is Latest Disney–YouTube TV Dispute Casualty

ESPN remains dark for the service’s 10 million subscribers.
Saint Francis guard Skylar Wicks (8) shoots a 3-pointer in the first half during an NCAA Men’s basketball game between the Oklahoma Sooners and the Saint Francis Red Flash at Lloyd Noble Center in Norman, Okla., on Monday, Nov. 3, 2025.

NCAA Pushes Kalshi to Clarify They Are Not Partners

The organization also wants Kalshi to commit to integrity protocols.

Featured Today

Oct 11, 2025; University Park, Pennsylvania, USA; Penn State Nittany Lions head coach James Franklin stands on the field following the game against the Northwestern Wildcats at Beaver Stadium

College Football’s Coach Buyout Bonanza: All Your Questions Answered

Schools owe their fired coaches millions in buyouts—and it isn’t over.
Oct 13, 2024; Chicago, IL, USA; Susanna Sullivan of the United States of America finishes seventh in the Chicago Marathon at Grant Park
October 31, 2025

More Races, More Money: The New Calculus for Pro Marathoners

More races per year mean more money—but the math isn’t simple.
Oct 28, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers two-way player Shohei Ohtani (17) pitches during the fifth inning against the Toronto Blue Jays during game four of the 2025 MLB World Series at Dodger Stadium.
October 31, 2025

Shohei Ohtani Card Market Is Surging—With No Signs of Slowing

Cards have spiked hundreds of thousands of dollars from their initial value.
September 21, 2025; Santa Clara, California, USA; NFL commissioner Roger Goodell before the game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Arizona Cardinals at Levi's Stadium
October 26, 2025

NFL Fall Meeting: 7 Big Topics Among Team Owners 

Media, facilities, and labor highlight some of the key areas of concern.
Mar 20, 2025; Lexington, KY, USA; Alabama State Hornets guard Amarr Knox (1) shoots the ball against Auburn Tigers forward Johni Broome (4) during the second half in the first round of the NCAA Tournament at Rupp Arena.

NCAA and Federal Gambling Probes Loom Over Men’s College Basketball Season

Some schools have not yet been publicly named, the NCAA told FOS.
November 4, 2025

College Hoops Accounts for Nearly 30% of Revenue-Sharing Payments

Men’s and women’s basketball account for nearly 29% of revenue-sharing money.
November 4, 2025

March Madness Could Still Expand in 2027 Despite Fan Pushback

The NCAA could add four or eight teams to the tournaments in 2027.
Sponsored

How HOKA is Reimagining the NIL Relationship

On Location is redefining the Olympic experience by creating lasting connections beyond the Games.
November 3, 2025

First Set of CFP Rankings Could Signal Committee’s New Priorities

New this year is the CFP’s move to straight seeding.
November 3, 2025

Coaching Buyouts to Surpass $1B in College Football Playoff Era

College football buyouts continue to expand at a record pace.
Auburn Tigers tight end Preston Howard (15) is tackled by Kentucky Wildcats defensive back Jordan Lovett (25) as Auburn Tigers take on Kentucky Wildcats at Jordan-Hare Stadium in Auburn, Ala. on Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025. Kentucky Wildcats defeated Auburn Tigers 10-3.
November 3, 2025

25% of SEC Football Coaches Fired So Far This Season

The conference owes coaches about $100 million worth of buyouts.
November 2, 2025

College Football Buyouts Hit $185M As Auburn Fires Hugh Freeze

Four out of the SEC’s 16 teams have fired their football coaches.