Six Things in Sports the Pandemic Revealed Are Unnecessary

COVID-19 has revealed much about sports over the past year. Specifically, what’s not needed.

The pandemic has revealed much about our lives in general too, from the likely permanent shift to remote work and the childcare crisis in this country. In every aspect of our life, COVID-19 put a magnifying glass to our faults and exposed them.

In sports, that was most clearly seen with college football, which plowed through with a dreadful season during the fall, marked by cancellations, controversies, and terrible ratings. Other sports have fared better, though none have escaped the pandemic unharmed.

bowl games are stupid
As we hopefully look to the future after President Biden’s announcement that there should be enough vaccine supply for every American adult in two months’ time, we can also start to see the post-pandemic future for sports. By looking back to look forward, we realize there are some things that we really don’t need moving forward. Here are a few:

Bowl Games

In terms of embarrassments in sports during COVID, I don’t think anything tops college football’s bowl season. Multiple games were canceled during the season due to COVID restrictions. Many, many teams opted out of playing games as their regular seasons ended. Imbalances between conferences meant that a 2-8 Mississippi State team initially made a bowl game while a 9-2 Army team did not.

Things did not get better as bowl season started, as several games were called off due to COVID cases and/or contract tracing. The games themselves were completely unremarkable. The playoff featured three sleep-inducing blowouts. It was a fitting end to the worst college football season of my lifetime, and I hope it never loses its crown.

For my entire life before 2020, I staunchly defended bowl games. I’m here to say I was wrong. I’ve always viewed a true college football playoff in the form of a 16-team tournament as a far-off utopia. Instead, it’s now what needs to happen. The bowl system is officially meaningless and now hurting the sport. It’s time to do better.

The National Anthem

Outside of baseball games, I’ve never really understood why we played the National Anthem before sporting events. Baseball, to me, made sense as America’s pastime and the sweet sounds of an ump yelling, “Play ball!” after it ends. The other sports? Not so much. It’s the only time I ever hear the anthem.

Since Colin Kaepernick took a knee, the National Anthem became a lightning rod for controversies as racists rushed in to argue that free speech somehow didn’t apply for those two minutes. For years before, I thought the dumbest thing in sports was when the beer vendors stop selling while the song was playing and we stood in line with our hats removed in the weirdest ritual you could possibly imagine.

Things came to a head this year when the Dallas Mavericks stopped playing the song before games and not a single person noticed until Fox News ran it through the Right-Wing Outrage Machine. We don’t need to play the National Anthem before every game. You want to trot out a big name before the Super Bowl or the World Series, fine, have fun. But on a random Tuesday in February, I don’t need to hear the song before watching the Islanders play the Capitals.

All Star Games

The NBA is playing its All-Star Game this weekend and the consensus seems to be, Why?

All-Star Games made sense in a bygone era when not every game was on TV and it was a rare opportunity to see all of the big names play a big game. In baseball, the split between the American and National League gave the added bonus of seeing pitchers go against batters they never faced in the regular season.

None of this applies anymore. No amount of money or gimmicks will make the players care. The ratings for these games remain stronger than regular season games, but still far off their peaks. What’s the point? It’s a money grab for leagues that have plenty of money already. We went a full calendar year without an All-Star Game and I don’t think there’s a single sports fan that missed them.

Conference Tournaments

The biggest hurdle left for Gonzaga in this college basketball season is surviving its conference tournament. It doesn’t matter how they play. The main goal is to avoid getting COVID and avoid getting hurt. For about 30 teams already locked into the NCAA Tournament, it’s the same deal.

conference tournaments are stupid
For teams on the bubble, conference tournaments have meant less and less over the years, according to the little impact they’ve had in seeding from tournament committees. And for one-bid leagues, the conference tournament only exists to get them one game on ESPN, while jeopardizing their best team’s chances to make the tournament.

Conference tournaments used to be a big deal, and I get that. But they aren’t anymore. In 2014, UConn lost its conference tournament final yet won the NCAA Tournament. Does a single UConn fan care that they lost the conference tournament? I can name every NCAA Tournament winner for the past decade, but I can name about five conference tournament winners, if that.

Championship Week sounds great and we love watching a ton of basketball, but it’s ultimately meaningless in the same way that bowl games are. College basketball is hurting because the focus is squarely on the NCAA Tournament and not the regular season. The conference tournaments only make that worse.

Preseason NFL Games

As I was putting this column together, I literally forgot about the NFL’s preseason not happening because it was so meaningless and stupid to begin with. Then I remember it didn’t happen and not a single soul on planet Earth cared. The NFL is moving to 17 regular season games and a reduction in preseason games. Almost there, but not quite. Reduce that to zero, let teams have more scrimmages, and we’ll be good. The NFL has plenty of money to make up for it.

Announcers on Site

I’ll conclude with one that I would have never imagined pre-pandemic.

Networks, most notably ESPN, had been testing out announcers calling games from remote locations, namely studios, for several years before the pandemic. They were very poorly received. Not because of the actual announcing or telecast, but because ESPN was doing it solely as a cost-cutting measure to not send announcers to games they deemed “lower” profile.

As COVID-19 forced announcers to call games remotely, I realized how little it mattered. I very rarely can tell if an announcer is on site or not watching games unless there is a bad technical issue.

Do I want announcer on site? Of course. But our new abnormal will include many things that we never envisioned before, such as more people working from home. So, if there are more games called by remote announcers, I’m not going to be as upset as I was pre-COVID.

It’s just one example of how the pandemic has completely upended the world of sports, and will continue to do so for years to come. 

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