Washington State quarterback Jayden de Laura throws a pass during the second half of a game against Oregon on Nov. 14, 2020, in Pullman. (AP Photo/Young Kwak)

Washington State quarterback Jayden de Laura throws a pass during the second half of a game against Oregon on Nov. 14, 2020, in Pullman. (AP Photo/Young Kwak)

WSU-Stanford football game canceled; Apple Cup in limbo

Saturday’s game was called off due to a positive virus test at WSU and subsequent contact tracing.

By Theo Lawson / The Spokesman-Review

One day after it was learned starting quarterback Jayden de Laura had come down with COVID-19, Washington State’s game against Stanford was canceled and declared a no-contest due to the Cougars falling below the 53-man scholarship requirement, the Pac-12 Conference confirmed in a statement Friday afternoon.

Athletic director Pat Chun said the team learned around 11 a.m. four football players had been placed in the COVID-19 protocol. With five others placed in the protocol earlier this week, WSU’s football team currently has nine players in isolation, Chun said. The Cougars had nobody in the COVID-19 protocol prior to their last game, a 43-29 loss to No. 11 Oregon last week at Martin Stadium.

Friday’s news also leaves next week’s Apple Cup in jeopardy. WSU is scheduled to host Washington at 7:30 p.m. on Nov. 27 and Chun indicated the school would have a better idea of the game’s feasibility by Sunday.

“Our plan is to get through tomorrow’s cycle of Pac-12 games and then on Sunday, we’ll begin our daily assessments and hopefully build up to the Apple Cup on Friday,” Chun said. “But really on Sunday we’ll begin to go through those assessments again.”

Chun said he hasn’t communicated with UW Athletic Director Jen Cohen or anyone in the Pac-12 about potentially moving the game back to Saturday or Sunday if it gave WSU a better chance to field a team. Given the proximity of the schools, that may be feasible, especially with more than seven days to plan. When UCLA and California lost their respective opponents last week due to COVID-19, the programs separated by just six hours hashed out a game in less than 38 hours and kicked off at 9 a.m. Sunday.

That’s a discussion Chun and Cohen could be holding in the next few days, but the WSU AD didn’t have enough information Friday afternoon, and news of the Stanford cancellation was still too fresh to look that far down the road.

“My bag, the travel bag is still in my car, so the expectation when I left the house this morning was a happy wife and daughters because I’d be gone finally for another night,” Chun said. “So, today was just really about getting on that plane and getting to Stanford and unfortunately that did not happen.”

Players who test positive for COVID-19 must self-isolate for 10 days after their initial test, while those placed in the protocol for contact tracing must be held out for 14 days. Under those guidelines, the four players who were placed in the protocol Friday would not be available to play in the Apple Cup. Of the original five players placed in the protocol earlier this week, only those who tested positive for COVID-19 would theoretically be available for next Friday’s game – presuming their tests came Sunday, Monday or Tuesday.

Stanford explored other options to play a game this weekend, but determined none were feasible, the school said in a statement.

In a school statement, WSU Director of Athletics said the Cougars fell below the 53-man threshold for “a number of reasons” and that the school had been in communication with Stanford throughout the week, optimistic Saturday’s game would still be played. A school official confirmed to The Spokesman-Review the team held a normal practice on Thursday in Pullman.

In a statement confirming the cancellation, the Pac-12 said the decision was based on “Washington State not having the minimum number of scholarship players available for the game as a result of a number of positive football student-athlete COVID-19 cases and resulting isolation of additional football student-athletes under contact tracing protocols.”

In order to play, the Pac-12 requires teams have 53 scholarship players available, including at least one quarterback, seven offensive linemen and four defensive linemen. The Cougars have been able to field a full squad the first two weeks of the season, but it hasn’t come without its challenges, and more of those came up this week.

News of de Laura’s positive test emerged Thursday, but it’s unknown how many other WSU players were placed in COVID-19 protocol due to positive tests or contact tracing.

“I’m disappointed for our team and our players,” first-year WSU coach Nick Rolovich said. “They have battled through so much this year. We had a good week of practice and were excited to play this game. I recognize the pain they feel with his lost opportunity but this 2020 football team is a resilient group of young men.”

As Chun alluded to, the Cougars have faced other obstacles this season, with a handful of players entering the transfer portal of opting out of the 2020 campaign altogether. Will Rodgers III, a senior who’s started in a handful of games for WSU over the years, was the latest player to enter the portal, submitting his name just two days after the team’s 43-29 loss to 11th-ranked Oregon.

After the season opener at Oregon State, Rolovich told reporters his team had 32 players unavailable, that they didn’t bring a full travel squad to Corvallis and that “if a few bad things happened, I’m not sure we could’ve lined up.”

Injuries have also been an issue for the Cougars. Junior running back Max Borghi has been the most notable absence through two games, but WSU played without “Z” receiver Calvin Jackson Jr. in the most recent game and the Cougars have had to survive without a variety of other players on their depth chart early in the season – for injuries and other reasons. That list includes: edge Willie Taylor III, safeties Chad Davis Jr. and Tyrese Ross, cornerback Derrick Langford and linebacker Travion Brown.

Before de Laura’s positive COVID-19 test, there had been only one known case on WSU’s football team and just five within the athletic department since daily antigen testing began in October. As of last week, the school had administered more than 5,000 daily tests to football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball players.

But that number has seen at least a slight uptick this week, with men’s basketball coach Kyle Smith contracting COVID-19 on Wednesday, forcing him to miss at least one game on the team’s bench. No other members of the basketball program were placed in the COVID-19 protocol.

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