San Antonio Express-News

Uconn receives top seed but starts without its coach

- By Greg Luca STAFF WRITER

With a bracket set and protocols in place, teams will begin arriving in San Antonio on Tuesday in advance of an unpreceden­ted NCAA women’s basketball tournament.

For the first time, 64 teams gather in one geographic area to compete for a national championsh­ip, playing 63 games across six sites in the San Antonio region between Sunday and April 4.

The Final Four will be contested beginning April 2 at the Alamodome, and the NCAA selection committee on Monday tabbed Connecticu­t, Stanford, North Carolina State and South Carolina the favorites to advance to that stage, awarding them No. 1 seeds.

Connecticu­t faced some uncertaint­y as coach Geno Auriemma tested positive for the coronaviru­s, will remain in isolation for 10 days and rejoin the team on March 24.

That means he will miss the Huskies' first game against High Point and perhaps their second-round game against Syracuse or South Dakota State.

The opening games are set for 11 a.m. Sunday in the River Walk Region, with No. 5 Iowa facing No. 12 Central Michigan in the Alamodome and No. 7 Virginia Tech meeting No. 10 Marquette in San Marcos. Thirty-two first-round games will be staggered through the day Sunday and Monday.

Houston, Depaul, Notre Dame and Oklahoma were designated as replacemen­t teams. If any team in the field is deemed unable to compete due to COVID-19 protocols, that spot may be filled prior to 5 p.m. Tuesday.

A single-bid conference can replace its automatic qualifier but any other team dropping out of the tournament would be supplanted by one of the four designated teams.

Once the tournament is underway, no further replacemen­ts will be considered, and the bracket will not be reseeded. If a team is forced to drop out of competitio­n due to COVID-19 protocols, its opponent advances to the next round.

Opening-round games Sunday and Monday will be split between five venues: the Alamodome, the Bill Greehey Arena at St. Mary's University, the Erwin Center in Austin, Texas State's Events Center in San Marcos and UTSA'S Convocatio­n Center.

The second round March 23-24 will be held at the three San Antonio locations before teams converge at the Alamodome for the Sweet 16 on March 27-28, the Elite Eight on March 29-30, and the Final Four from April 2-4.

Attendance for the opening two rounds of the tournament will be limited to team guests, with each member of a team's travel party allowed up to six tickets for an anticipate­d cap of about 400 spectators.

Fans will be allowed in the Alamodome at up to 17 percent capacity, or roughly 11,000 fans, for the Sweet Sixteen, Elite Eight and Final Four, matching the system used at the venue for the Alamo Bowl and UTSA football games through the fall.

All members of a team's travel party, which is capped at 34 people, are required to test negative for COVID-19 on seven consecutiv­e days before departure to San Antonio. They will also be tested daily during their stay and will wear devices to assist in contact tracing should any positive tests arise.

The NCAA has instituted strict masking and distancing guidelines, with players eating boxed meals either in their hotel rooms or in a distanced team room with assigned seating.

Practices will be held on nine courts in the Convention Center or two courts at the Alamodome.

The San Antonio local organizing committee released a study projecting an economic impact of $27.2 million, anticipati­ng 35,000 hotel room nights and more than 15,000 visitors for the event.

San Antonio earned the bid to host the women's Final Four in 2018, marking the third time the event will be held in the Alamodome. The city also hosted in 2002 and 2010.

In December, the NCAA women's basketball committee announced the decision to play the entire tournament in one location to limit risk amid the COVID-19 pandemic, and San Antonio was the only site being explored.

Every game will be televised nationally, including at least six games carried on ABC, marking the first time the women's tournament appears on a broadcast network since 1995. All other games will air on ESPN, ESPN2 or ESPNU.

 ?? David Butler II / USA Today ?? Connecticu­t finds itself in a familiar spot as a No. 1 seed but must deal with coach Geno Auriemma’s positive virus test that will force him to miss one and possibly two games.
David Butler II / USA Today Connecticu­t finds itself in a familiar spot as a No. 1 seed but must deal with coach Geno Auriemma’s positive virus test that will force him to miss one and possibly two games.

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