Ivy League Cancels Winter Season

The pandemic continues to affect athletics. 

The Ivy League logo

The Ivy League logo

With COVID-19 cases rising across the country, the Ivy League has canceled its winter athletic season. 

The statement by the Ivy League Council of Presidents, released yesterday, also noted that fall sports will not be conducted during the upcoming spring semester—a possibility floated in July when the Ivy League canceled fall competition. The spring season will also be postponed “through at least the end of February 2021.” 

“The unanimous decisions…follow extended consideration of options and strategies to mitigate the transmission of the COVID-19 virus, an analysis of current increasing rates of COVID-19—locally, regionally and nationally—and the resulting need to continue the campus policies related to travel, group size and visitors to campus that safeguard the campus and community,” the statement said.

The decisions do not preclude on-campus training with enrolled student-athletes, continuing the “phased approach” that Ivy League schools have implemented during the fall 2020 term. 

Despite canceled seasons, “[w]inter and fall sport student-athletes will not lose a season of Ivy League or NCAA eligibility, whether or not they enroll,” the statement said. “Students who wish to pursue competition during a fifth year of undergraduate education at their home institution, if permitted, or as a graduate student elsewhere will need to work with their institutions in accordance with campus policy to determine their options beyond their current anticipated graduation date.”

“Student-athletes, their families and coaches are again being asked make enormous sacrifices for the good of public health,” the statement concludes. “We look forward to the day when intercollegiate athletics—which are such an important part of the fabric of our campus communities—will safely return in a manner and format we all know and appreciate.”

Read more articles by Jacob Sweet

You might also like

Summers Will Retire as Harvard Professor

The former University president is stepping down in the wake of Harvard’s Epstein probe.

Five Questions with Tien Jiang

How brushing and flossing can protect your heart

Five Questions with Nancy Gibbs and Thomas E. Patterson

The Washington Post laid off more than a third of its journalists. Does this signal a new era for newsrooms?

Most popular

A Cap on A’s at Harvard? Students and Faculty Raise Concerns at Town Hall

Dozens debate the grade inflation proposal that faculty will discuss next week.

The Trouble with Sidechat

No one feels responsible for what happens on Harvard’s anonymous social media app.

The True Cost of Grade Inflation at Harvard

How an abundance of A’s created “the most stressed-out world of all.”

Explore More From Current Issue

Purple violet flower with vibrant petals surrounded by green foliage.

Bees and Flowers Are Falling Out of Sync

Scientists are revisiting an old way of thinking about extinction.

A woman gazes at large decorative letters with her reflection and two stylized faces beside them.

The True Cost of Grade Inflation at Harvard

How an abundance of A’s created “the most stressed-out world of all.”

Four Labrador puppies—two black and two yellow—sitting in green grass.

What Do Puppies Know?

Canine capabilities emerge early and continue into adulthood.