Miami Herald (Sunday)

Pandemic already has taken a toll on NCAA tourney

- BY CHUCK CULPEPPER The Washington Post

As could happen maybe only in a pandemic, the happy release of the brackets will follow a week of tortured brackets.

While the NCAA Tournament brackets coming Sunday at 6 p.m. will start the country on that threeweek annual diversion it missed last year, they also will come with a looming worry. For a view of that worry, look at the conference tournament­s of the week gone by.

The ACC, MEAC and

Big 12 tournament­s also had brackets, brimming with teams and stories and possibilit­y.

Those brackets took dents when Duke, then North Carolina A&T, then Virginia, then Kansas had to withdraw midway before quarterfin­als or semifinals because of positive coronaviru­s tests within their programs. Big games wound up as glum walkovers, leaving the question of whether the big bracket might suffer some similar fate, even as teams will inhabit a bubble in Indianapol­is, the one-area site of this year’s event.

The global pandemic that scuttled the event last year hung around long enough to leave it with a raft of oddball protocols this year. There’s a system of alternates in case any of the 31 automaticb­id teams or 37 at-large teams can’t make it to Indianapol­is. (The selection committee will choose alternates for the latter, the conference­s for the former.) There’s a deadline of Tuesday at 6 p.m. for when a team can withdraw and an alternate can replace it.

All teams and their support staffs, 34 people in total, must produce seven consecutiv­e days of negative tests before reaching Indianapol­is.

Any team can play if it can bring five players who are available after testing and tracing protocols.

In a potential quirk, any replacemen­t team would go on the same seeding line as the team it replaced, a matter that might stoke talk of asterisks in future record books.

“It just shows that regardless of what you’re doing, you’ve got to be a little lucky,” Florida State coach Leonard Hamilton said Friday night after his Seminoles advanced to play the ACC final against Georgia Tech in a case of two finalists who both had walkovers in their paths. “Regardless of how much you’re washing your hands, wearing masks, practicing all the safety measures and regulation­s that we’ve been practicing all year long, and then you come up here at the end and something unfortunat­ely happens. You really don’t even known where it came from and how it happened. That’s just the nature of what we’re dealing with.”

Could some team or other end its long slog of a winter, with the isolation and hushed arenas, with a loss not at basketball but at biology? It already has happened for some. The four teams who had to leave conference tournament­s already know various levels of that chagrin.

Surely none hurt more than North Carolina A&T, which won the Southern Division of the MEAC and prepped to serve as the No. 1 seed for the conference tournament in Norfolk, hunting the conference’s lone bid to March Madness. Instead, the Aggies had to withdraw Thursday before even playing, after which their athletic director, Earl Hilton, said in a statement: “To get to this point and have it taken away before we even get a chance to play is devastatin­g,” and, “The global pandemic has proven to be unpredicta­ble, and its outcomes are often cruel.”

Duke (13-11) exited before an ACC quarterfin­al against Florida State just as it had won two tournament games and aspired to tear through the thing all the way to the only possible NCAA Tournament qualificat­ion it seemed to have.

Athletic director Kevin White said in a statement, “As a result, this will end our 2020-21 season.”

Virginia (18-6) and Kansas (20-8) at least retained hope of reaching Indianapol­is, even after “a gut punch” (the words of Virginia Coach Tony

Bennett) and “a disappoint­ment” (Kansas Coach Bill Self). They had finished first and second, respective­ly, in their conference regular seasons. Both withdrew before conference tournament semifinals, leaving Georgia Tech and Texas to advance without sweating. Both had a player test positive.

Kansas already had two players who did not make the trip to the conference tournament because they isolated back at school under tracing protocols.

Both went into the once-unforeseea­ble process of updating NCAA officials about their statuses moment-to-moment.

That protocol comes with more protocols. While most teams should reach Indianapol­is by Sunday or Monday, others might be able to arrive later given circumstan­ces and seven days of negative tests for any player wishing to participat­e.

The “First Four” games that eliminate four teams and pare the field from 68 to 64, is set to begin on Thursday afternoon in Bloomingto­n, Ind., and West Lafayette, Ind., each about 75 minutes from downtown Indianapol­is, where all teams will stay in four hotels and use the city’s skyways to reach practices.

 ?? JARED C. TILTON Getty Images ?? FSU coach Leonard Hamilton said you have to be a little lucky to avoid COVID issues, which hit the ACC tourney.
JARED C. TILTON Getty Images FSU coach Leonard Hamilton said you have to be a little lucky to avoid COVID issues, which hit the ACC tourney.

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