Santa Fe New Mexican

Tournament in a bubble

NCAA says all games to be played in Indianapol­is

- By Michael Marot

The NCAA is giving Indiana an exclusive ticket to showcase March Madness and the basketball-crazed state can’t wait to take center stage this spring.

The NCAA announced Monday that its showcase event — the Division I men’s basketball tournament, all 67 games of it — will be played entirely in or near Indianapol­is. The hope is to limit the possibilit­y that the coronaviru­s pandemic cancels the wildly popular and lucrative tournament for a second consecutiv­e season.

“There are a number of world-class facilities in a close location and that was critical because you have to run a large number of games simultaneo­usly that you can manage and control,” NCAA President Mark Emmert said. “There were a number of cities that were very interested in hosting this event, but the immediate opportunit­y to do this in Indianapol­is was pretty self-evident for several reasons. For one, we were already going to be there.”

Indy was already scheduled to host the Final Four and it didn’t take long for the city to emerge as the favorite.

The original plan was for the 67 games to be played at 13 sites across the country, starting with the First Four in Dayton, Ohio. Regional sites were set for Minneapoli­s, Denver, New York City and Memphis, Tenn.

Instead, the buzzer beaters and jaw-dropping performanc­es will all take place in a state known perhaps more than any other for its love of basketball.

“I really don’t care if they play the tournament on Saturn or in Indianapol­is,” Louisville coach Chris Mack said. “Hopefully, we’re a part of it and we do our part to get there. And wherever they put it, they put it.”

Logistical­ly, Indy made sense, too.

Dozens of restaurant­s of hotels are within walking distance of Lucas Oil Stadium, home of the NFL’s Indianapol­is Colts, and Bankers Life Fieldhouse, home of the NBA’s Indiana Pacers and WNBA’s Indiana Fever. Many of those businesses and venues are connected by skywalks that allow players, coaches or fans to stay indoors. Hinkle Fieldhouse, the historic home of the Butler Bulldogs, and the Indiana Farmers Coliseum, where the IUPUI Jaguars play, are just short drives from the downtown area. Mackey Arena at Purdue and Assembly Hall at Indiana also are about an hour’s drive from downtown.

All of those venues are slated to host games. Playing in a state where the sport is revered and basketball stars are considered royalty doesn’t hurt, either. Oscar Robertson, Larry Bird, Rick Mount, Damon Bailey and the late John Wooden were all stars here at one level or another. Bob Knight, Gene Keady and the late Tony Hinkle, originator of the orange basketball, all coached in the state, which for decades had a single-class state tournament won famously in 1954 by Milan High, the inspiratio­n for Hollywood’s Hoosiers.

So perhaps bringing March Madness back home to Indiana, home of the NCAA’s headquarte­rs, was the natural choice.

“Last year, we had to rip March Madness away from all the teams and all the fans at the very last minute,” Emmert said. “We know it was the right thing to do, but it was a painful thing to do. So we want to deliver this year on the promise of March Madness. They deserve it.”

Some things aren’t expected to change. Selection Sunday is still set for March 14, the tourney field is expected to remain at 68 and the Final Four games are still scheduled for April 3 with the title game two days later. CBS Sports and Turner Sports will continue to televise and stream the games.

But this tourney will have dramatical­ly a different atmosphere.

Two courts will be constructe­d inside cavernous Lucas Oil Stadium, though only one game will be played at a time because of potential distractio­ns from whistles and horns going off. NCAA vice president of basketball Dan Gavitt said fewer games may be played each day because of longer breaks needed to properly clean the facilities. Preliminar­y round dates have not yet been set.

“If we’re going to be able to do it, it’s got to be done safely,” Creighton coach Greg McDermott said. “The more you can limit travel the better. To do it in the middle of the country makes it easier for everybody. … You want to be there, you want to be part of it. It’s going to be an historic event.” Fewer fans are expected, too.

NCAA officials said a limited number of family members of players and coaches can attend games, but they will consult local and state public health officials to determine final attendance.

COVID-19 testing will be conducted before each game and each team will be assigned its own floor and its own meeting spaces inside its hotel.

“We’ve very intentiona­lly talked about this being a controlled environmen­t,” Gavitt said. “The NBA and WNBA had much more of a bubble. We’re not going to be able to create that specifical­ly but we will come incredibly close to that.”

Gavitt cautioned that the holding the tournament will present many challenges. Scores of college basketball games have been canceled or postponed this season because of COVID-19 issues, with games called off on a near-daily basis.

Emmert said an announceme­nt about the Division I women’s tournament is expected soon. San Antonio, Texas, which was sheduled to host this year’s women’s Final Four, is believed to be the front-runner for a potentiall­y similar tourney.

Evansville, an southern Indiana city just across the Ohio River from Kentucky, will host the Division II championsh­ip, while Fort Wayne, in northeaste­rn Indiana, will host the Division III championsh­ip.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Duke players celebrate after their victory over Wisconsin in the 2015 Final Four championsh­ip game in Indianapol­is. The NCAA announced Monday that this year’s 67 men’s basketball tournament games, including the Final Four, will be played entirely in Indiana.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Duke players celebrate after their victory over Wisconsin in the 2015 Final Four championsh­ip game in Indianapol­is. The NCAA announced Monday that this year’s 67 men’s basketball tournament games, including the Final Four, will be played entirely in Indiana.

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