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Indoors or out, Dr. Henry shuts down sports games

鈥淚t will be an early 颅Christmas break for our players,鈥 颅Vancouver Island Soccer League executive director Vince Greco said Thursday after hearing the news adult and youth sports games on the Island 鈥 indoor or outdoor 鈥 are shut down due to the pand
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Vancouver Island Soccer League teams battle it out in a previous season. Adult games have been shut down due to the pandemic.

鈥淚t will be an early 颅Christmas break for our players,鈥 颅Vancouver Island Soccer League executive director Vince Greco said Thursday after hearing the news adult and youth sports games on the Island 鈥 indoor or outdoor 鈥 are shut down due to the pandemic. Youth sports can still practice and train on a 颅limited basis.

鈥淭here is a lot of work to be done in making up a new 颅schedule with new cohorts. We are starting from scratch,鈥 added Greco of the largest adult league on the Island. 鈥淲e are hopeful of a Jan. 8 return.鈥

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said the order is for the 鈥渘ext few weeks.鈥 She added that sport and physical activity accounts for 10 to 15 per cent of COVID-19 transmissions in sa国际传媒 and that may be an underestimate.

Henry announced Wednesday that all indoor adult team sports were prohibited. Further orders Thursday included outdoor sports.

Bringing people together is what sport does best and is its greatest attribute and appeal. The pandemic has, ironically, turned that into sport鈥檚 greatest detriment.

鈥淲hen people come together is when this virus can spread,鈥 said Henry, during her briefing Thursday.

鈥淎 lot of adult sports are really very much social gatherings as well as sport. Those types of gatherings are leading to transmission events. We鈥檝e seen it in a number of adult team sports. We need to step back from those. It鈥檚 the locker-room. It鈥檚 the before, it鈥檚 the after, and the going out for coffee or beer after a game that has been the most source of transmission. It鈥檚 difficult because much of that is built into the culture of adult team sports. So let鈥檚 focus on our children. Supervised sports for young people have not been a source of the same type of risk and transmission.鈥 Island sports organizations have reacted to the new orders.

The Victoria Minor Hockey Association, emerging from a voluntary two-week shutdown with the other 16 minor hockey associations on the Island, had just sent out its new schedule to parents and players on Tuesday. But those re-scheduled games, set to begin this weekend, are now cancelled because of the new orders. Practices are still allowed for youth sports but they have gone back to individually distanced skills and drills.

鈥淲e will be hosting a skills competition so at least we can get something competitive in,鈥 said Nicki Reich, president of the Victoria Minor Hockey 颅Association.

Juan de Fuca Minor Soccer Association president Kevin Allen informed his members by Facebook on Thursday: 鈥淒ue to the just announced updated provincial health order 鈥 all games are now cancelled until further notice. As we are to move back to Phase 1, non-contact, social distanced soccer. We are hopeful that we will be able to get back on the field in the new year, but only time will tell. Hopefully, better days are ahead.鈥

With the vaccines coming, Henry touched on those better days.

鈥淚t may feel like it but it鈥檚 not forever. It will change,鈥 she said.

鈥淲e will get back to having games and back to travel and playing against people from other communities. But right now we鈥檙e still having challenges. It鈥檚 not so much the kids on the field. It鈥檚 the away from the field of play. We鈥檝e looked at not having travel and no spectators to reduce those 颅probabilities. But we鈥檙e finding it鈥檚 still a challenge.鈥

There is a separate high-performance model that pertains to the guidelines, which includes exemptions for athletes training on the Island, Richmond and Whistler for next summer鈥檚 delayed Tokyo Olympics and the 2022 Beijing Winter Games.

It is not clear, however, how this affects other higher-performance sports. University of Victoria Vikes, Camosun College Chargers and Vancouver Island University Mariners team sports have already been cancelled for the season. But the sa国际传媒 Hockey League, with five teams in the Island Division, is scheduled to open the regular season Dec. 8 and the Victoria Royals of the WHL on Jan. 8.

The governor of a BCHL Island Division team, who did not want to be identified, said it is highly doubtful the league will begin the season as planned Dec. 8.

BCHL commissioner Chris Hebb could not be reached for comment.

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