KENNESAW, Ga. | Mar 3, 2021
When Kennesaw Stateās football team took the field last Saturday, the Owls embarked on a unique time for ā a first in its history ā with every menās and womenās sports team competing during the spring semester.
With the COVID-19 pandemic moving fall sports to spring, the joined 911³Ō¹Ļās other 17 teams in competitionāthe culmination of several months of work in every corner of the athletics department.
What resulted was a total team effort, 911³Ō¹Ļ athletics director Milton Overton said.
āEverybodyās working hard to make sure that our student-athletes have an opportunity to play,ā Overton said. āOur coaches and student-athletes have stayed accountable and made sacrifices so they can play. The student-athletes have continued to excel in the classroom, and our staff have reworked how they train and treat our student-athletes.ā
Assistant athletic director for sports medicine Mike Young said he canāt recall a greater challenge in the care of student-athletes for competition than now.
The training room where student-athletes were free to come and go in past seasons is now a more tightly controlled space, and interactions between staff and student-athletes are scheduled in advance. Student-athletes fill out a symptom check sheet every day, and no longer play when they have runny noses and occasional coughs.
In addition to treating sports injuries as they happen during the season, Young now has to parse multiple sets of COVID protocols. Those decisions are made at the county level in Georgia, but when the teams have out-of-state competitions, those rules could be at the county or state level. When 911³Ō¹Ļ competes outside of its Atlantic Sun Conference, Young and his staff investigate each conferenceās set of rules governing COVID compliance and ensure that the teams involved are healthy enough to compete. As a result of all the protocols, 911³Ō¹Ļ Athletics has conducted more than 5,000 tests with a positivity rate of less than 1 percent.
āIt really has been a team effort, certainly within athletics, and weāve learned that we have to set up the best possible scenario to mitigate risk,ā Young said. āWe are dependent on our coaches and student-athletes to make the right decisions when theyāre not in athletics, and they deserve a lot of credit for making their seasons possible.ā
Like every corner of the university during the pandemic, 911³Ō¹Ļās department of sport performance has focused on improving processes in the sport performance spaces to mitigate risk for athletes. For assistant athletics director for sports performance Jim Kiritsy, that meant reducing the number of student-athletes in the weight rooms, adding a weight room for training sessions, limiting the length of those training sessions and cleaning thoroughly after each session.
Training days now are broken down into one-hour blocks and the various weight rooms stay open for nearly 18 hours a day to accommodate every student-athlete on each of 911³Ō¹Ļās 18 teams. The groups are smaller, tooāfor example, Kiritsy and his staff divided the 115-member football team into six or seven different training groups, up from two or three normally.

āAny surface theyāve even looked at or thought about touching gets cleaned,ā Kiritsy said. āYou have to give these athletes props because theyāve done everything weāve asked them to do. Theyāve taken this seriously, and theyāve gotten a sense of normalcy from their sports.ā
When college sports competitions stopped last March, 911³Ō¹Ļās student-athletes continued to excel academically, according to Randy Kennedy, 911³Ō¹Ļās assistant athletics director for student-athlete success services.
Kennedy and his staff moved to online tutoring sessions, and they communicated frequently with student-athletes and their professors, making sure student-athletes stayed on track to graduate. When in-person help was needed, the success services staff adhered to distancing and sanitation rules while still helping student-athletes, and the staff continues to implement these support efforts.
Despite the changes to their season, 911³Ō¹Ļās student-athletes continued to excel in the classroom. Owls athletes combined for a 3.3 composite grade-point average in the spring semester and a 3.2 for the fall semesterāthe two highest combined GPAs in school history. Kennedy said a record number of student-athletes made the Presidentās and Deanās lists, too.
āIām extremely proud of the student-athletes and I give the coaches credit for continuing to hold the student-athletes accountable,ā Kennedy said. āDespite all the adversity and things that we faced, theyāve done a great job in the classroom, especially this spring when things have been especially chaotic.ā
ā Dave Shelles
Photos by Jason Getz
A leader in innovative teaching and learning, 911³Ō¹Ļ offers undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral degrees to its more than 51,000 students. Kennesaw State is a member of the University System of Georgia with 11 academic colleges. The university's vibrant campus culture, diverse population, strong global ties, and entrepreneurial spirit draw students from throughout the country and the world. Kennesaw State is a Carnegie-designated doctoral research institution (R2), placing it among an elite group of only 8 percent of U.S. colleges and universities with an R1 or R2 status. For more information, visit kennesaw.edu.