At the risk of raising the ire of some in here, America is getting nice weather at the moment, I would have thought getting outside rather than fretting about schedule quality is a better use of people's time. I understand a lot better now the intricacies of SOS (I originally only knew it as an ABBA song), but given it's May, surely having a happy, safe and hopefully productive, summer, should be the priority. Apologies in advance if I haven't taken this topic seriously enough.
Fair point, but I'm not sure having nice weather is going to differentiate May from any other month for someone like me living in Southern California!

More seriously, social media is partly to blame for some of us paying more attention to D3 soccer in the spring than we might have in past years. It used to be that off-season was a dark period in college soccer, but spring is when men's D3 soccer programs' Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook accounts start to come alive with news of their schedules, their new commits (often rolled out gradually over days and weeks), coaching hires, players graduating or returning (some of which is a Covid phenomenon), and, unfortunately lately, schools closing. Schools also use social media to post videos and photos from their spring practices and games (except at NESCAC schools like Amherst, which may result in less activity on the accounts of those schools). And, finally, Simple Coach's coach-to-coach interviews during the off-season, which only just began last season I believe, and articles in publications like the New England Soccer Journal, work to keep people interested.
But, I also think there are at least a few of us now who follow D3 men's soccer generally rather than just as parents of a son playing at a specific school. if you're the latter, your interest may wane when your son's team isn't playing (or even during the season if your son isn't playing). If you're the former, though, the off-season is a time to examine broader issues like rule changes, conference realignments, coaching philosophies, and something like schedules, which give a preview of how coaches are thinking about the upcoming season. It's not much different than being a fan of any sport in America these days. There really isn't an off-season anymore in the age of 24 hour sports media news with drafts, free agent signings, spring training/training camps, etc.
And, of course, we may just be insane. But I'll leave it to Paul Newman to discuss the clinical nature of our hobby/obsession!