Martin said to his knowledge there have not be COVID-19 positive tests among Barbour County players or high school faculty.
“To my knowledge, nobody has any kind of problem directly,” Martin said. “I know we have had some teachers who have had family members who have caught it, but nothing has directly hit the faculty, the coaches or the students from what I know.”
Both Briggs and Martin said there has been no decision on academics for the upcoming year in Barbour County, though Briggs indicated a decision would likely come later this week.
Briggs said Dr. Matthew Alexander, Jr., the school system superintendent, made the decision to cancel athletics last week and informed Alabama High School Athletic Association Executive Director Steve Savarese shortly after that decision.
“It has been in the plans per our superintendent for a while,” Briggs said. “He had been watching the COVID cases over the summer and he put it in the writing and also made a phone call to Mr. Savarese with the Alabama High School Athletic Association on Thursday. He was issued an OK with no penalty for cancellation under a state and country-wide pandemic. There will be no cancellation penalty.”
Efforts to reach Dr. Alexander on Tuesday for comment were unsuccessful.
On Monday, Greene County and Sumter County in West Alabama announced it would postpone all athletics for nine weeks. Barbour County, however, elected to cancel all athletics, including its high-profile basketball program. The Jaguars boys basketball team was Class 2A state runner-up last year and was expected to challenge for the 1A state title this year.