Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sun Belt teams roll with covid format

- ELI LEDERMAN

The Sun Belt Conference basketball season is set to open Friday with a scheduling format aimed at ensuring safety in an unpreceden­ted coronaviru­s season.

This season, both ASU and UALR men’s and women’s basketball programs will face only divisional foes. They also will play the same team on Fridays and Saturdays, sometimes less than 24 hours apart.

While coaches and players understand the emphasis on safety, questions remain about how the tightly packed schedule will affect competitiv­e balance.

“[The plan) is something that is a good thing as far as covid- 19 goes,” Univers i ty of Arkansas at

Little Rock women’s Coach Joe

Foley said.

“As far as the conference and basketball, it’s not the best by any means.”

The UALR men tip at home with Texas-Arlington for a pair of games while the women travel to play Texas-Arlington this weekend.

The Arkansas State University men’s team begins with two games at Louisiana-Monroe. The ASU

women were set to start at home, but covid-19 issues in the Louisiana-Monroe program forced those two games to be postponed.

The division- only format means each Sun Belt team will face only five different opponents on an 18- game schedule. UALR and ASU make up one- third of the East Division, joined by Louisiana-Monroe, Texas-Arlington, Texas State and Louisiana-Lafayette. Appalachia­n State, Coastal Carolina, Troy, South Alabama, Georgia State and Georgia Southern comprise the West Division.

The divided conference will reconvene in Pensacola, Fla., for the Sun Belt Tournament during the first week of March.

“I think every conference is trying to figure this season out the best way they can,” Sun Belt Conference Commission­er Keith Gill said. “For us, this was what we thought would work best in terms of minimizing travel, minimizing changes and exposure opportunit­ies in moving teams around the country and trying to complete a season.”

Reduced travel, fewer games and longer gaps between contests — along with the conference’s testing guidelines — were part of the recommenda­tions made by the Sun Belt’s covid-19 advisory panel, which was made up of medical profession­als from the conference’s member institutio­ns.

The format also gives the conference flexibilit­y in regard to postponeme­nts. The Sun Belt is eyeing midweek slots to schedule make-up dates.

“You can’t bend covid-19 to basketball,” Gill said. “You have to bend basketball to covid-19.”

But covid-19 is not the only concern for coaches and players.

The UALR women’s team will play Friday at 1 p.m.; 27 hours later, the Trojans will tip off at Texas-Arlington once again. Every program in the conference will maintain a similar schedule over the next two months.

“It’s a really tough schedule to ask college players to play,” UALR junior guard Bre’Amber Scott said. “It’s like AAU almost, but the games [in college] are 10 times harder.”

The format leaves players, who in normal Sun Belt seasons play Thursday and Saturday, a short window for recovery. Programs with deeper benches will benefit more than usual from the ability to spread minutes and rest key players.

The season will lend itself to coaches who can make adjustment­s on the fly. ASU men’s Coach Mike Balado compared the preparatio­n required this winter to the work a football team puts in, preparing all week for one opponent.

“It’s different, but we’re embracing it and we’re just happy to be playing basketball,” Balado said. “With everything this year, if it were normal it’d be boring.”

A coach can’t do much between Friday and Saturday other than review game video and hope his players get a good meal and some sleep, UALR men’s Coach Darrell Walker said. Foley and Balado both feel that this season will be more about preparing their own teams than planning for opponents.

Walker is not too keen on facing only five different teams over the next two months.

“Why am I playing one team four times?” Walker asked. “And if we’re lucky enough to make it to the tournament in Florida, we haven’t played any of the other teams on the other side. It’s not good, as far as I’m concerned, but it is what it is.”

Any scheduling blowback hasn’t reached conference headquarte­rs in New Orleans, Gill said Wednesday. He reiterated safety as the primary concern in the Sun Belt’s planning, and he credited schools for their adherence to covid-19 guidelines and willingnes­s to adjust to the ever-changing landscape.

The rigors will begin to show themselves once conference play begins, and the Sun Belt’s experiment starts Friday.

 ??  ?? Foley
Foley
 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Staci Vandagriff) ?? UALR Coach Joe Foley (right) talks with his team during a timeout against Arkansas earlier this month. Foley said the Sun Belt Conference’s new schedule plan benefits teams in dealing with covid-19 but otherwise, “it’s not the best by any means.”
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Staci Vandagriff) UALR Coach Joe Foley (right) talks with his team during a timeout against Arkansas earlier this month. Foley said the Sun Belt Conference’s new schedule plan benefits teams in dealing with covid-19 but otherwise, “it’s not the best by any means.”

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