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Washington State’s game against Stanford canceled, declared no-contest

By the time Pat Chun joined reporters for a Zoom call, most in the Washington State universe had already absorbed the news the Cougars wouldn’t be playing Stanford on Saturday night in the Bay Area.

Given the 24-hour news cycle that exists in 2020, the next question seemed obvious: What about the Apple Cup?

One day after it was learned starting quarterback Jayden de Laura had come down with COVID-19, WSU’s game against Stanford was canceled and declared a no-contest due to the Cougars falling below the 53-man scholarship requirement, the Pac-12 Conference confirmed in a statement Friday afternoon.

Athletic director Chun said the team learned at approximately 11 a.m. that four more football players had been placed in the COVID-19 protocol. With five others placed in the protocol earlier this week, WSU’s football team has nine players in isolation, Chun said. The Cougars had nobody in the COVID-19 protocol prior to their last game, a 43-29 loss to No. 11 Oregon last week at Martin Stadium.

The news now places next week’s Apple Cup in jeopardy. WSU is scheduled to host Washington at 7:30 p.m. on Friday and Chun indicated the school would have a better idea of the game’s feasibility by Sunday.

If the game happens, the Cougars and Huskies will be playing for the 113th time. If it doesn’t, the schools will miss out on the Apple Cup for the first time since 1944.

“Our plan is to get through tomorrow’s cycle of Pac-12 games and then on Sunday, we’ll begin our daily assessments and hopefully build up to the Apple Cup on Friday,” Chun said. “But really, on Sunday we’ll begin to go through those assessments again.”

Chun said he hasn’t communicated with UW Athletic Director Jen Cohen or anyone in the Pac-12 about potentially moving the game to Nov. 28 or 29 if it gave WSU a better chance to field a team.

Given the proximity of the schools, that may be feasible, especially with a week of planning time. When UCLA and California lost their respective opponents last week due to COVID-19, the programs – separated by just six hours – hashed out a game in less than 48 hours and kicked off Sunday at 9 a.m.

That’s a discussion Chun and Cohen may be holding in the next few days, but Chun didn’t have enough information when he spoke to reporters Friday afternoon, and news of the Stanford cancellation was still too fresh to look that far down the road.

“My bag, the travel bag, is still in my car, so the expectation when I left the house this morning was a happy wife and daughters cause I’d be gone finally for another night,” Chun said. “So, today was just really about getting on that plane and getting to Stanford and unfortunately that did not happen.”

Players who test positive for COVID-19 must self-isolate for 10 days after their initial test, while those placed in the protocol for contact tracing are forced to quarantine for 14 days.

Under those guidelines, the four players who were placed in the protocol Friday would not be available to play in the Apple Cup. Of the original five players placed in the protocol earlier this week, only those who tested positive for COVID-19 would hypothetically be available for Friday’s game – presuming their tests came Sunday, Monday or Tuesday.

Stanford explored other options to play a game this weekend, but determined no alternatives made sense, the school said in a statement.

In a statement confirming Friday’s cancellation, the Pac-12 said the decision was based on “Washington State not having the minimum number of scholarship players available for the game as a result of a number of positive football student-athlete COVID-19 cases and resulting isolation of additional football student-athletes under contact tracing protocols.”

In accordance with school policy, Chun declined to say how many of WSU’s players in COVID-19 protocol had tested positive and how many were there via contact tracing.

To play, the Pac-12 requires teams to have 53 scholarship players available, including at least one quarterback, seven offensive linemen and four defensive linemen. The Cougars fielded a full squad the first two weeks of the season, but it hasn’t come without its challenges, and more came up this week.

“I’m disappointed for our team and our players,” first-year WSU coach Nick Rolovich said in a statement. “They have battled through so much this year. We had a good week of practice and were excited to play this game. I recognize the pain they feel with this lost opportunity, but this 2020 football team is a resilient group of young men.”

The Cougars have faced other obstacles this season, with a handful of players entering the transfer portal or opting out of the 2020 campaign altogether.

Will Rodgers III, a senior who’s started in a handful of games for WSU over the years, was the latest player to enter the portal, submitting his name two days after the team’s 43-29 loss to 11th-ranked Oregon.

After the season opener at Oregon State, Rolovich told reporters his team had 32 players unavailable and the Cougars didn’t bring a full travel squad to Corvallis.

“If a few bad things happened,” Rolovich said, “I’m not sure we could’ve lined up.”

Injuries have also been an issue for the Cougars.

Junior running back Max Borghi has been the most notable absence through two games, but WSU played without receiver Calvin Jackson Jr. in the most recent game and the Cougars have had to survive without a variety of other players on their depth chart early in the season – for injuries and other reasons. That list includes: edge Willie Taylor III, safeties Chad Davis Jr. and Tyrese Ross, cornerback Derrick Langford and linebacker Travion Brown.

Before de Laura’s positive COVID-19 test, there had been only one known case on WSU’s football team and five within the athletic department since daily antigen testing began in October. As of last week, the school had administered more than 5,000 daily tests to football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball players.

That number has more than doubled this week and it’s not exclusive to the football program. The school announced Wednesday that men’s basketball coach Kyle Smith had tested positive for COVID-19, forcing him to miss at least one game on the team’s bench.

No other members of the basketball program were placed in the COVID-19 protocol at the time.

WSU-Stanford becomes the sixth Pac-12 game to be canceled or altered this season and the second one this week. At this point, four other games in the conference are moving ahead as scheduled.

During the first week of the season, games between Washington and California, and Utah and Arizona State were called off due to COVID-19. Last week, California’s game against Arizona State was canceled, as was UCLA’s against Utah, but the Golden Bears and Bruins still managed to sneak in the crossover game. Earlier this week, ASU’s game against Colorado was also canceled.