Big Ten Conference postpones all 2020-21 Fall Sports

The Big 10 conference announced Tuesday that it would be cancelling all fall sports. The cancellation is a huge blow to colleges as the COVID-19 virus continues to impact sports, schools and businesses alike. Yahoo Sports’ Nick Bromberg joins The Final Round panel to break down what this means for college and professional sports going forward.

Video Transcript

MYLES UDLAND: All right, welcome back to "The Final Round" here on Yahoo Finance. Myles Udland with you in New York. Well, a story we've been following over the last couple of weeks, really the last couple of days as well, is everything going on in the world of college football. The dominoes have certainly started to fall.

Just within the last half hour, the Big Ten announcing that it will postpone its fall 2020 football season, I guess plans to play in the spring. Joining us now to talk about everything we do and don't know right now in the world of college football is Nick Bromberg, a reporter here at Yahoo Sports. Nick, thanks for joining the program.

So let's just start with the news from the Big Ten. Expected. It was reported a couple places yesterday. Then there were some denials. Then today, what we knew was coming, did eventually come with that season getting postponed.

NICK BROMBERG: Yeah. And I think we're now looking to the fact of which other Power Five conference does it next. And I think a lot of people expect that the Pac-12 will follow in the Big Ten's footsteps.

The Big Ten was the first Power Five conference of the major five conferences to make this announcement that they're going to spring. But it was also preceded by the Mid-American Conference, which is in the Big Ten's footprint in the Midwest, Mideast region. And then also, the Mountain West. Yesterday they announced that they were gonna push to spring. So we are down right now-- as of this moment, 89 of 130 FBS teams are still set to play this fall.

DAN ROBERTS: Nick, Dan Roberts here. I'm glad you mentioned the MAC, because it seems like the MAC was sort of actually the first domino to fall. Obviously not a Power Five conference. But what this all reminds us of-- and I think it's something a lot of people don't realize even if they watch college football-- is just how separately all the conferences operate. There's really no equivalent of a-- of a commissioner of college football.

A lot of people during this time are-- are using all of this to say there should be some kind of czar. And then some people think, well, isn't that the NCAA? But the NCAA really doesn't serve that function.