AthensVol2007
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2021
- Messages
- 4,702
- Likes
- 7,766
That’s factually not true. They removed Justice from Jarrett’s room on Sunday so they did separate him from a sick teammate and quarantined him the entire time, testing him daily. Jarret, if he was unvaccinated, would’ve tested on Friday before the opening game and again on Sunday, before Monday’s game. If he played on Monday as he did, that’s because he was negative at the time of testing. If he was vaccinated then there was no reason to send him to get tested because that wasn’t the NCAA’s protocol. They tested him on Tuesday on their own accord after his symptoms worsened. Him being cleared Monday is on the NCAA because he was either not tested due to being vaxed or tested negative as part of the routine testing for unvaxed.Every school/team agrees to accept total responsibility for the health of their traveling group. Every group member has agreed to their personal responsibility to be forthcoming about their health situation. Avett himself said the team had several players “fighting a bug” —that bug, it turned out, was Covid.
NC State was responsible to get sick members of their group away from the group and everyone else in Omaha, and get them tested. They not only didn’t do that, they let those kids play in several games.
No matter what you think of the NCAA rules, NC state agreed to them and flaunted them. They got exactly what they knew was coming if this happened.
Friday, the day of the 2nd Vanderbilt matchup, 2 more showed signs and NCSU proactively sent them to get tested on their own that morning; they were both unvaxed and therefore should’ve been tested on Thursday as was normal protocol, to test the day before a game. If they tested negative Thursday, which would be the assumption given they were set to play Friday, then there would’ve been no reason to quarantine them leading up to Friday’s game.
The timeline (assuming it was conveyed in truth by the NCAA) is out there to read yet you continue to throw out statements that aren’t true and apply your own conjecture to how NCSU knowingly and misleadingly mishandled it.