September 1, 2021

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Welcome to FOS College, where we’re writing about how two football teams in Ida’s path stopped at nothing to keep their Week 1 plans intact — and what this means in the context of the NCAA’s “amateurism” model.

– Amanda Christovich

Finding a Way to Play

Photo: LSU Athletics/Design: Alex Brooks

When it became clear Hurricane Ida would become a lethal storm, Louisiana residents began to contemplate the same question from 16 years ago, the day before Katrina made landfall: Stay put and ride out the storm, or evacuate to surrounding states?

For FBS football players at LSU and Tulane — two schools directly in Ida’s path — the choice was made for them. Even a Category 4 hurricane couldn’t stop them from finding a way to play their Week 1 matchups.

Over the weekend, the teams evacuated Baton Rouge and New Orleans. The Green Wave headed to Birmingham, Alabama, and set up camp at UAB. On Monday, Tulane coach Willie Fritz told reporters that he and players — many of whom are from the New Orleans area — were “waiting to find out how everything is going at home.” 

On Tuesday, as Ida’s remnants battered Birmingham with rain, the team moved their practice to Tuscaloosa at the University of Alabama, per SI.

The Tigers, on the other hand, went in the opposite direction, fleeing to Houston. Coach Ed Orgeron posted a photo Monday evening of the team on the Texans’ field. 

The Tigers will remain in Houston until Thursday, when they’ll fly straight to Los Angeles to prep for their season opener against UCLA, the team said. 

Tulane has a particular financial incentive to play Saturday. The program had a lucrative home game scheduled against Oklahoma — part of a three-game contract that brought in more than $1 million to the school, according to NOLA.com. 

Despite the uncertainties, Tulane and Oklahoma reworked their plans to play the game: Oklahoma will host, but will give Tulane all its “net proceeds from ticket sales.” Tulane will continue practicing in Alabama “until it is safe to return to New Orleans,” the team announced.

Most of New Orleans and parts of Baton Rouge remain without power, so the future schedule for home games hasn’t been announced yet. 

“We’re just kind of rolling with the punches,” Fritz said.

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Photo: Maria Lysaker-USA TODAY/Design: Alex Brooks

Providing evacuation plans to athletes was a good thing. But after evacuating, LSU and Tulane players are expected to practice and play through the storm’s aftermath.

The NCAA insists they’re still amateurs — which is why teams don’t pay them salaries — but the plans more closely mirror those of an NFL team than they do the rest of the student body.

It’s a similar schedule to the New Orleans Saints, who left New Orleans before the storm and headed for Dallas. They’ve been practicing at AT&T Stadium and will remain there until they disperse for their mandatory preseason break on Thursday, head coach Sean Payton told reporters.

They’ll play their season opener against the Packers at TIAA Bank Field in Jacksonville, the team announced Wednesday. The game was supposed to be at the Caesars Superdome. For the next few weeks after that, the team will practice at TCU, ProFootballTalk reported.

It’s a similar deal for the Green Wave and the Tigers, who may remain outside Louisiana for the next couple weeks.

Regular students received different directives.

Tulane opened campus buildings up to students who didn’t evacuate before the storm, but didn’t announce any mass-evacuation plans until Monday evening after Ida passed. Only then did the university bus students to Houston where they could fly home or stay at a temporary setup. 

They’ll have remote classes starting September 13, and have been asked not to return until in-person classes restart on October 11.

Like Tulane, LSU didn’t evacuate students in advance. And on Tuesday, the school announced it will be closed until September 7.

In Other News

  • MarketPryce, an NIL marketplace, announced a $3 million funding round.
  • Mercedes-Benz announced a partnership with NIL marketplace Dreamfield, where the luxury auto brand will sign athletes as ambassadors.
  • Ohio State quarterback Quinn Ewers signed a three-year, $1.4 million NIL deal with GT Sports Marketing, according to an ESPN report. Ewers left high school early shortly after the NCAA passed NIL rules.

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Final Thoughts

There’s no denying that evacuating football players ahead of Ida was the safest possible option, even if the campuses couldn’t match those resources for other students. It’s better than failing to provide any resources at all.

But looking ahead, should “amateur” athletes play games amid a crisis — especially athletes whose families may have suffered during the storm?

While that remains up for debate, both teams are playing this weekend. 

“Probably the best distraction is football,” Fritz said Monday. “I’ve been doing all sorts of things other than football in the last 24 hours. So it was great to get out on the practice field and practice.”

Note: FOS College will now hit your inbox Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 1 p.m. ET.

Tips? Feedback? Reach out to me at amanda@fos.company or on Twitter.

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Written by Amanda Christovich

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