Texarkana Gazette

Messy Start

Playing amid pandemic tests basketball teams’ adaptabili­ty

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Sacramento State has a game at Cal Poly scheduled for Dec. 21, two days after the Hornets host UC Davis. Cal Poly has the same COVID-19 testing standards, so it should be easy for the Hornets to pull off.

It’s not, like nearly everything that comes with trying to play college basketball in a pandemic.

Sac State’s coaches and players need to have a test before they can play the Mustangs, so after travelling south, they’ll have to do it early on game day. Cal Poly has an on-campus testing site, but there’s no guarantee results will come back before the 2 p.m. tipoff.

So while trying to prepare for a game the day after a long bus ride, the Hornets will also be keeping an ear out for the all-clear call.

“If the results come back early, maybe we’ll play at 1. If the results come back late, maybe we’ll play at 3,” Sac State coach Brain Katz said. “It’s just the unpredicta­bility of everything we have to go through. It’s understand­able, but it does take a toll.”

Trying to play a college basketball season during a pandemic has not been easy. Games were canceled, programs shut down due to positive tests and replacemen­t games were hastily scheduled — even before the start of the season on Nov. 25.

Since the season started, dozens of programs have halted activities and daily cancellati­ons — ranging into the hundreds so far — have become the norm. A handful of teams have yet to play a single game more than two weeks into the season.

The Ivy League and a few other teams opted to not play at all before the season started and some the coaches whose teams are currently playing have wondered why the season is continuing as coronaviru­s numbers surge across the country.

“I don’t think it feels right to anybody,” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said earlier this week before the Blue Devils canceled the rest of their nonconfere­nce schedule. “Basically, it was the mentality of, ‘Get as many games in as possible.’ I would just like for the safety, the mental and physical health of players and staff to assess where we’re at.”

College basketball was put in a difficult position when the NCAA Tournament was canceled in the spring, causing a $375 million revenue shortfall for the NCAA. The 2021 NCAA Tournament will be played in one location — likely Indianapol­is — but getting there has already proven to be difficult.

Other sports have been able to pull off seasons without too many disruption­s, but college basketball is unique in that it is played indoors and has more than 300 teams trying to play at locations across the country.

Navigating the pandemic world has required creativity, adaptabili­ty, cooperatio­n and a whole lot of patience.

“You used to just have to worry about your team and the scouting report,” Baylor coach Scott Drew said. “Now you’ve got to worry about everything.”

Baylor had to pull out of an event at Mohegan Sun in Connecticu­t after Drew tested positive for COVID19 and the No. 2 Bears’ showdown against top-ranked Gonzaga was shelved due to positive tests in the Zags’ programs.

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