San Antonio Express-News

NCAA applies its version of bubble wrap

Multiple venues offer ‘controlled environmen­t’

- By Joseph Duarte joseph.duarte@chron.com Twitter: @joseph_duarte

As the college basketball season was played this season during a global pandemic, a nasal swab became as much standard-issued equipment as sneakers and shorts.

Since last summer, players across the country were administer­ed COVID-19 testing on a weekly basis. That increased to several times a week before games to a required seven consecutiv­e days of negative tests before the 68 teams arrived this week in Indianapol­is for the start of the NCAA Tournament.

It’s part of what the NCAA calls a “controlled environmen­t” as it attempts to limit risks to players and coaches during the threeweek March Madness event. While several safeguards are in place, the NCAA’S measures are nowhere close to the restrictio­ns placed by the NBA’S bubble last year in Orlando, Fla.

“I don’t think it will be much of an adjustment because this year we’ve been in a bubble,” University of Houston senior forward Justin Gorham said. “Whether it’s a home game or away games, (Cougars) coach (Kelvin Sampson) just preaches to keep your circle close. Don’t be going out. Don’t be hanging out with a lot of people. It won’t be different. The world has been dealing with this for a year.”

A few hours after winning the American Athletic Conference tournament championsh­ip and receiving a No. 2 tournament seed, Houston arrived early Monday morning to the team hotel in downtown Indianapol­is. The 34 Tier 1 individual­s that are part of

the travel party — players, coaches, trainers, support staff — were tested upon arrival. They are required to quarantine for two days and have two consecutiv­e negative tests.

Daily PCR tests will be administer­ed to each team until departure from the tournament.

Each team has its own floor at the hotel. Each player has his own room. Two negative tests are required before they can begin practice. Meeting rooms and dining areas have been set up to maintain social distancing.

All teams are staying at five hotels connected by skywalks to the Indiana Convention Center, allowing participan­ts to move around without leaving the socalled bubble. Only Tier 1 participan­ts can enter hotels.

“If the teams continue to do the

great work that they’ve done just to get to the tournament, we will have a very safe, very healthy 67game tournament and will crown a champion,” said Mitch Barnhart, chair of the NCAA Division I men’s basketball selection committee.

All Tier 1 participan­ts must wear a “Safetag,” a small tileshaped device that collects data to assist with contact tracing in the event a participan­t comes in proximity with someone who test positive. The device must be worn during all practices and games but is not required when players are in rooms, during meals or studying, said Dan Gavitt, the NCAA’S senior vice president for basketball.

To reduce travel, the NCAA Tournament — known for packed venues and regional sites from

coast-to-coast — will be played at four locations in Indianapol­is (Bankers Life Fieldhouse, Hinkle Fieldhouse, Indiana Farmers Coliseum and Lucas Oil Stadium), along with Mackey Arena (West Lafayette, Ind.) and Assembly Hall (Bloomingto­n, Ind.).

The NCAA has already run into problems with Virginia (ACC), Kansas (Big 12) and North Carolina A&T (Mid-eastern Athletic) forced to withdraw from conference tournament­s due to COVID-19 issues. Virginia, the 2019 champion, and Kansas were among the tournament field announced Sunday. Both schools remain hopeful they can play.

At the AAC tournament, Sampson expressed some concern about the potential for a positive test to derail a team’s tournament run.

As long as a team has five healthy players it will be allowed to keep playing. Teams have until 5 p.m. Tuesday when the men’s bracket locks in to notify the NCAA if it is unable to play. At that time, four teams (Louisville, Colorado State, Saint Louis and Mississipp­i) will be on stand-by as a replacemen­t.

After 5 p.m. Tuesday, if a team does not have enough eligible players, the game will be ruled a no-contest and the opponent will advance to the next round, the NCAA said.

“We decided if they had five players eligible and healthy (they could play),” Gavitt said. “We wrestled with contingenc­ies and thought it was fairest for a team that earned its way. That even if it was compromise­d, they should have the opportunit­y to play rather than be replaced.”

Houston went through a COVID-19 outbreak that resulted in a 14-day pause in December. Sampson disclosed that all 15 players on the roster had contracted the virus at some point during last summer. UH has encountere­d no problems since.

After an AAC tournament game this weekend, Sampson said he received text messages from friends who are former coaches that questioned why conference tournament­s were still being played. Sampson has been a supporter of mask wearing and other safety measures during the pandemic and recently received his second dose of the vaccine.

“That’s why you should just go to Indianapol­is now. Why put it in jeopardy?” Sampson said he was told. The Cougars had been a lock for the tournament for months.

“It makes a lot of sense. But I don’t think we can just live our life in fear. We have to live our life.”

 ?? Darron Cummings / Associated Press ?? The NCAA is attempting a “bubble” setup that’s not as stringent as what the NBA pulled off last summer. Multiple Indianapol­is sites will be used, like Bankers Life Fieldhouse, above.
Darron Cummings / Associated Press The NCAA is attempting a “bubble” setup that’s not as stringent as what the NBA pulled off last summer. Multiple Indianapol­is sites will be used, like Bankers Life Fieldhouse, above.

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