A couple of weeks ago, the university and Sisson — after UCD began daily antigen testing for athletes — reached a compromise to allow resumption of workouts. But the ban on games, in or out of the county, remains.
It’s that last part of the protocol that has miffed some Davis basketball fans and has campus officials gnashing their teeth, knowing that Yolo County is the only one in the state with such a rigid no-play-anywhere edict
According to the office of Yolo Public Health Officer Aimee Sisson, the county will be revising the local Attachment B to the health order. That’s the section of the Yolo County edict that says about professional and collegiate sports: “(Activity) is limited to drills and conditioning only, with physical distancing, and only outdoors. For clarity, all competitive games, scrimmages, and similar activities that do not allow for physical distancing are prohibited.”
“(The new directive) will likely be released (Wednesday),” county Public Information Officer Jenny Tan told The Enterprise.
In traveling south next week, the UCD men — who normally would have flown to the weekend series — will take the bus as a further nod to staying isolated during the pandemic.
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