Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NCAA nixes fall title events

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The NCAA called off fall championsh­ip events — a move Thursday that does not affect major college football — because not enough schools will be competing in sports such as men’s and women’s soccer, and women’s volleyball during the first semester.

NCAA President Mark Emmert made the announceme­nt in a video posted on Twitter, but it has been clear this was coming as conference­s canceled fall sports seasons because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t and can’t turn toward winter and spring and say, ‘How can we create a legitimate championsh­ip for those students?’ ” Emmert said. “There are ways to do this. I am completely confident we can figure this out. If schools and conference­s want to move forward … let’s do it.”

Emmert also said NCAA officials have begun work on contingenc­ies for the NCAA basketball tournament­s, possibly moving dates and looking into creating bubbles in which the teams can compete.

He said the NCAA would prioritize staging championsh­ips in winter and spring sports because those — including the lucrative men’s basketball tournament — were canceled when the pandemic first spiked across the United States in March.

Moving fall sports to the spring still must go through the Division I Council, which is comprised of representa­tives of all 32 conference­s, and be approved by the Division I Board of Directors.

Championsh­ip events in all sports could be modified going forward to deal with the virus, Emmert said. That is likely to include fewer teams participat­ing at fewer and predetermi­ned sites.

The spring calendar already features more sports than the fall, so cramming still more in — including FCS football — will create logistical challenges.

“Will it be normal? Of course not. We’ll be playing falls sports in the spring,” he said. “Will it create other conflicts and challenges? Of course. But is it doable? Yeah.”

Last week the NCAA Board of Governors said championsh­ip events in a sport would be canceled if less than 50% of the teams competing in that sport played a regular season.

Divisions II and III almost immediatel­y followed by canceling their fall championsh­ips. Division I — which is comprised of 357 schools — held on, but as conference after conference canceled their fall seasons the tipping point came.

Fall sports also include field hockey, cross country and water polo. Schools in conference­s that have not yet canceled their fall seasons could conceivabl­y try to stage regular-season competitio­n over the next few months.

The highest tier of Division I football, the Bowl Subdivisio­n, is not affected. The College Football Playoff is run by the conference­s, and six of those leagues are still moving toward having a season, including the SEC, Atlantic Coast Conference and Big 12.

Beyond those six conference­s, the rest of Division I has mostly been shuttered. Whether they can pull off football or any other sport during the pandemic is still to be determined.

Earlier in the day, the NCAA’s chief medical officer and two of its infectious disease expert advisers warned the uncontroll­ed spread of covid-19 throughout the United States remains an enormous obstacle for college sports to overcome.

“I feel like the Titanic. We have hit the iceberg, and we’re trying to make decisions of what time should we have the band play,” said Dr. Carlos Del Rio, executive associate dean at Emory University.

Del Rio, a member of the NCAA’s covid-19 advisory panel, appeared with NCAA chief medical officer Dr. Brian Hainline on a webinar hosted by the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

“We need to focus on what’s important,” Del Rio said. “What’s important right now is we need to control this virus. Not having fall sports this year, in controllin­g this virus, would be to me the No. 1 priority.”

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