The Houston Cougars are again without an opponent and still waiting to play their season opener as COVID-19 issues wiped out two more major college football games Wednesday.
The latest team forced to bail on Houston was North Texas, which said it would not be able to field a team for Saturday’s road game after four positive tests this week. The school didn’t specify an affected position group or how many additional people needed to self isolate because of contact tracing.
Tulsa’s scheduled game at Arkansas State this week was also postponed. Arkansas State said only that it was unable to assemble a two-deep depth chart at an unspecified position.
Earlier in the day, the Atlantic Coast Conference rescheduled Notre Dame’s game at Wake Forest for Dec. 12. The seventh-ranked Fighting Irish could not play Saturday in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, because of 13 players in isolation with COVID-19 and 10 more in quarantine due to contact tracing.
Wake Forest has moved its nonconference game against Campbell to Oct. 3, a previously open date. Notre Dame also has an open date on Oct. 3, giving the Irish more time to get their players back.
As the number of games involving FBS teams postponed or canceled since Aug. 26 reached 20, another conference is taking steps toward trying to play fall football.
Mid-American Conference university presidents are scheduled to meet Friday with playing in the fall on the agenda, a person familiar with the meeting told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the conference was not making its return to play discussion public.
The MAC was the first FBS conference to postpone fall football in early August because of concerns about playing through the pandemic.
On Thursday, presidents’ meetings will be held in both the Pac-12 and Mountain West, with both conferences eyeing late October starts to the football season after initially postponing all fall sports.
All this comes as the Southeastern Conference prepares to kick off its season with seven games on Saturday.
”I don’t know that I would call this a normal feel to Week 1, but it does feel like Week 1,” SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey said. ”I appreciate that we’re here.”
SEC teams might play twice before Houston gets in its first game. The Cougars’ next scheduled game is Oct. 8 at home against Tulane.
Houston was scheduled to play last Friday at Memphis, but the American Athletic Conference put off that game a week in advance because of a virus outbreak among the Tigers. It was replaced by a hastily arranged reunion with former Southwest Conference rival Baylor last Saturday, but the Bears had to cancel that game only a day before kickoff because of multiple positive tests.
That cancellation drew the ire of Cougars coach Dana Holgorsen this week.
”I don’t know how it gets to 22 hours before the game. We’ve had four games canceled, so we’re kind of used to that,” Holgorsen said Monday before the bad news from North Texas. ”How it gets to 22 hours before the game, I don’t know. There’s a reason why our conference and the Big 12 tests three times a week. So I would think that our opponent kind of knows where they’re at, just like we kind of knew where we were.”
Houston athletic director Chris Pezman said Wednesday that he understood the ”COVID-related decision North Texas has made to not play” and appreciated the consistent dialogue with UNT officals.
”I am disappointed for our student-athletes who have continued to focus on competing this season and were ready to play this Saturday,” Pezman said. ”We will continue to work to adjust our schedule with the hopes of playing as soon as we can.”
The Cougars were originally supposed to open the season Sept. 3 against Rice, but that game was postponed in August. That was after a Sept. 12 game at Washington State was canceled when the Pac-12 originally decided not to play this fall.
North Texas (1-1) was coming of a 65-35 home loss to SMU last Saturday. The Mean Green’s next scheduled game is their Conference USA opener at home Oct. 3 against Southern Miss.
”We knew that there would be challenges with COVID-19 this season and we were taking precautions to hopefully avoid this situation,” North Texas AD Wren Baker said. ”We are hopeful we can resume safe activities soon.”
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AP Sports Writer Stephen Hawkins contributed.
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More AP college football: https://apnews.com/Collegefootball and https://twitter.com/AP-Top25
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