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EPC votes to delay the start of fall sports

The PIAA has given the green light for fall sports to move ahead on schedule this fall, but it appears the Eastern Pennsylvania Conference will be taking a cautious approach.

A meeting between principals and athletic directors of the 18-member conference -which includes Pleasant Valley from the Times News coverage area - met on Thursday and delayed a final vote on how the fall sports schedule will look.

But it was acknowledged that the season would be pushed back by a month for contact sports such as football, field hockey and soccer. Those practices are expected to start on Sept. 14.

That means competitions won’t begin until the last week of September, and the first football games would be held Oct. 2.

Non-contact sports such as cross-country, golf and tennis may be able to start on time, depending on Tuesday’s vote.

East Penn Conference vice president and Liberty athletic director Fred Harris confirmed the move on Thursday and said they anticipate having a final plan and vote on Tuesday.

“There was a vote on a delayed tier start for fall sports based on contact and non-contact sports,” said Harris, as the rumored support to push back the season was by a 13-5 margin. “Our goal is to compete in-county as much as possible to help mitigate risk.”

Harris didn’t go into specifics in regards to the plans the EPC has on the table, but it appears that the league will want to limit competition to schools by county, meaning Lehigh, Northampton and Monroe counties would stay within their territories to compete against each other.

The PIAA held a board of directors meeting on Wednesday and gave leeway to localized decisions across the state.

“In addressing the COVID-19 crisis and how it has affected the 67 counties differently, PIAA understands the flexibility needed by school districts to make localized measured decisions, rather than a ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach,” the PIAA said in a news release.

Fall practices were set to begin on Aug. 10 for football’s heat acclimatization period, while other fall sports would begin on Aug. 17.

The first date for football across the state was slated for Aug. 28, with all sports starting by Sept. 4. The PIAA approved two alternate plans at Wednesday’s meeting to push golf, girls tennis, cross-country, girls volleyball, field hockey and soccer to Sept. 14, and football to Sept. 18. Another plan pushed sports back to the first week of October for an official start of competitions.

Girls volleyball still has question marks, due to playing indoors and the state’s restrictions of 25 people in a venue.

“Our biggest concern is to get the schools open,” said Harris. “I think the league as a whole is set on what we want to do moving forward, and there’s consensus. We’ll release those specifics next week after Tuesday’s vote.”