The NCAA Div. II Presidents Council voted to cancel its seven fall championships for the 2020 season announced Wednesday due to the operational, logistical and financial challenges presented by the COVID-19 pandemic.
"I am disappointed in this announcement and feel extremely bad for our scholar-athletes," said Hardrocker Athletic Director
Joel Lueken. "But we will continue to abide by the NCAA guidelines and of that of the RMAC's (Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference). We will negotiate this the best we can. Hardrockers are resilient and we will get through this."
The council made the move after the NCAA Board of Governors directed each division to make a decision on its fall sport championships. The Board of Governors also directed each NCAA division to meet various requirements to compete in the fall. Those directives include that all member institutions apply the resocialization principles to fall sports and set a 50 percent sponsorship threshold for a fall sport championship to be conducted, among other requirements.
As of Wednesday, 11 of the 23 Division II conferences had announced they will not compete during the traditional fall season.
With the Board of Governors' directives, the Division II Presidents Council determined that it was not feasible to hold fall championships as planned or to postpone them to the spring while prioritizing the health and well-being of student-athletes.
"After reviewing and discussing the Board of Governors' directives, the Division II Presidents Council made the difficult decision that holding fall championships in any capacity was not a viable or fiscally responsible option for Division II," said Sandra Jordan, chancellor of South Carolina Aiken and chair of the council. "This decision was discussed very thoroughly, and I assure you, it was not made lightly. It is important to note that fall student-athletes will be given eligibility-related flexibility to allow them championship opportunities in the future. As we move forward, we will continue to focus on providing the best championships experience for our winter and spring student-athletes who were not afforded those opportunities at the beginning of this pandemic."
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