Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Positive COVID-19 tests derail Kansas, Virginia tourney runs

- By Aaron Beard

For the second time in as many days, major conference­s have called off tournament games due to COVID-19 concerns — this time involving No. 11 Kansas and No. 16 Virginia.

The Jayhawks withdrew from the Big 12 Tournament on Friday after a positive COVID-19 test within the program, which led to the cancellati­on of their semifinal matchup with No. 13 Texas.

And earlier Friday, the ACC canceled the league’s semifinal game between the top-seeded Cavaliers and Georgia Tech due to a positive test, quarantini­ng and contact tracing within the Cavaliers program. The announceme­nt came less than

12 hours before the Yellow Jackets and Cavaliers were set to play the first of two semifinal games.

It is unclear what the

COVID-19 issues mean for the Virginia and Kansas going forward, though the Jayhawks released a statement that they would continue preparing for the NCAA Tournament.

What is clear is that Georgia Tech will advance to Saturday’s championsh­ip game to face the winner of the North Carolina-Florida State matchup. And in the Big 12, the Longhorns moved on to the title game to face the Oklahoma StateBaylo­r winner.

Cavaliers coach Tony Bennett described the outcome of the tests as a “gut punch.”

“I’m hurting for our players, especially our seniors,” Bennett said in a statement. “I told our young men they have every reason to be disappoint­ed, but it is still very important how they choose to respond. We are exhausting all options to participat­e in the NCAA Tournament.”

Virginia athletic director Carla Williams said in the statement the school was “in communicat­ion with the appropriat­e officials regarding our participat­ion” in the NCAA Tournament, which starts Thursday.

The cancellati­ons came a day after Duke withdrew from the ACC Tournament and ended its season amid its own positive test before facing the 15th-ranked Seminoles in the quarterfin­als.

The Jayhawks learned earlier this week they would be without center David McCormack and backup forward Tristan Enaruna due to COVID-19 protocols. They beat No. 25 Oklahoma 69-62 in the quarterfin­als without them, and had gone the entire season without an outbreak that forced a cancellati­on or postponeme­nt.

“Obviously we are disappoint­ed and our players are disappoint­ed that they can’t continue to compete for the Big 12 championsh­ip,” coach Bill Self said in a statement. “While we have been fortunate to avoid this throughout the season, there are daily risks with this virus that everybody participat­ing is trying to avoid.

“We have followed the daily testing and additional protocols that have been setup for us, unfortunat­ely we caught a bad break at the wrong time. I look forward to preparing my team in probably a unique way for next week’s NCAA Tournament.”

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