San Diego Union-Tribune

MADNESS ARRIVES FOR 68

- BY BILLY WITZ Witz writes for The New York Times.

When the NCAA men’s basketball tournament bracket was announced Sunday night, it was in keeping with sports during the pandemic: stripped down, masked up and written hopefully in pencil.

There was no slow tease because, well, what was the point? Some of the usual excitement — is the alma mater being shipped to Portland, Ore., or Pittsburgh followed by a rush to book flights and hotels — was removed from the equation this year because the entire 68-team tournament, which begins Thursday with four play-in games, is being staged in and around Indianapol­is.

As expected, Gonzaga, unbeaten in 26 games, was awarded the top seed and placed in the West region. Baylor, Illinois and Michigan were given the other No. 1 seeds. Hartford and Grand Canyon are making their first appearance­s, and Georgetown and Oregon State — picked last in their conference­s at the start of the season — are unexpected interloper­s as Big East and Pac-12 champions.

Duke and Kentucky, the sport’s two biggest TV draws, are gone together from the tournament for the first time in 45 years, but at least the star of the 2018 tournament has returned: Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, age 101 and fully vaccinated, is back as Loyola Chicago’s talisman.

Still, the event’s characteri­stic volatility may extend well beyond the court given the effects of the pandemic.

This year, it is fair to say, March Madness is not hyperbole.

Consider the extraordin­ary lengths that the NCAA, after canceling last year’s tournament, which was expected to generate $800 million, is taking to stage the event in a season in which 20 percent of regular-season games were canceled, numerous

prominent coaches contracted the virus and powerhouse programs like Duke, Virginia and Kansas dropped out of their conference tournament­s last week because of coronaviru­s infections.

The teams, which began arriving in Indianapol­is on Saturday night by chartered plane, or by bus if they were within 350 miles, have been required to return seven days of negative tests before departing. They will be sequestere­d in single rooms on their own floor in hotels where they can eat, sleep, study, practice and in some cases play without having to step foot outdoors.

The fear, of course, is that players might contract the virus while mingling with the hundreds of thousands of fans who are expected to descend on Indianapol­is over the next few weeks as the five basketball venues — from quaint Hinkle Fieldhouse to voluminous Lucas Oil Stadium — will be opened to 25 percent capacity.

If teams, which will be tested daily, do not have at least five players available, they will be replaced by a team on a waiting list — Louisville is at the top, followed by Colorado State, St. Louis and Mississipp­i — until 3 p.m. PDT Tuesday. After that, teams that cannot play will exit and their opponents

will be advanced to the next round. It is not clear whether an infected team will be required to have a coach.

“I can’t imagine an athletic director not having some supervisio­n or coach available in some capacity,” said Dan Gavitt, the NCAA’s senior vice president for basketball. “But these are extreme times.”

Formulatin­g a field has also been complicate­d by the pandemic, leaving the selection committee, led by Kentucky’s athletic director, Mitch Barnhart, to assess teams that have been in and out of virus pauses and have had missing players or coaches for certain games. The stunted schedules have thrown bugs into the ratings metrics used to seed teams.

For example, the NCAA’s NET ranking has Colgate as the ninth best team in the country. The Raiders (14-1) played only five teams this season — all in the Patriot League, whose tournament they won Sunday. But they were given a computer turbo boost because Army and Navy, the only Patriot teams that played outside the league, had a close loss to Florida and a victory over Georgetown on their resumes.

Colgate was given the 14th seed in the South region and matched up against Arkansas in the first round.

Meanwhile, Michigan State, at 15-12 and with three wins in the past three weeks over top 10 teams (Michigan, Illinois and Ohio State), is ranked 70th in the NET, a place normally far past the wrong side of the bubble. The Spartans were seeded 11th in the East region and will face UCLA in an intriguing playin game.

The conference tournament­s were no more orderly. Not only were there scant top seeds wrapping up automatic berths — just 11 of 31 managed a sweep of the regular season and tournament titles — but the committee struggled with where to place Kansas and Virginia when both teams might be missing key contributo­rs, if they can play at all.

As it turned out, they placed both in the West region, which left the possibilit­y of a clear path to the Final Four for Gonzaga, which is trying to become the first team since Indiana in 1976 to win a championsh­ip with a perfect season. The second seed in the West is Iowa, which Gonzaga — coming off a 17-day pause — cruised past in December.

The most stacked region appears to be the Midwest, where Illinois could have to go through Loyola-Chicago or Georgia Tech, and then dangerous Oklahoma State to reach the regional final, where they could see red-hot San Diego State, rugged West Virginia or dynamic Houston.

At least those teams are in, though. For Louisville, the last team left out, it was an especially cruel twist. Rick Pitino, who was fired by Louisville in 2017 amid a federal corruption investigat­ion that could bring NCAA sanctions, has Iona in the tournament, playing No. 2 seed Alabama. And the head of the selection committee, Barnhart, is the athletic director at Louisville’s rival, Kentucky.

 ?? DAVID BECKER AP ?? Gonzaga guard Jalen Suggs and the Bulldogs are the top seed in the NCAA Tournament.
DAVID BECKER AP Gonzaga guard Jalen Suggs and the Bulldogs are the top seed in the NCAA Tournament.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States