The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

N. Carolina back in mix as ACC host

NCAA may follow suit after changes to ‘bathroom bill.’

- By Aaron Beard

The Atlantic GLENDALE, ARIZ. — Coast Conference is ready to start holding events again in North Carolina after the state rolled back a law that limited protection­s for LGBT people.

In a statement Friday, the league said its Council of Presidents has voted to again consider North Carolina sites to host events.

In September, the ACC pulled 10 neutral-site championsh­ips for the 2016-17 season due to the law, including moving the football championsh­ip game from Charlotte to Orlando.

The league had made it clear that it would consider moving events already awarded to North Carolina for the 2017-18 season if there wasn’t a change in the law.

But North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper signed a compromise bill Thursday to repeal elements of the so-called “bathroom bill” after passage by the state legislatur­e earlier in the day, making that threat moot.

Now the football title game will return to Charlotte in December while the women’s basketball tournament will return to Greensboro after a one-year stop in South Carolina. The men’s basketball tournament, perhaps the league’s premier event, was already slated for the second in a two-year stay in the New York borough of Brooklyn before returning to North Carolina in 2019 (Charlotte) and 2020 (Greensboro).

The ACC’s decision to pull events from North Carolina came shortly after the NCAA stripped the state of several championsh­ip events, including opening-weekend games in the men’s basketball tournament set for Greensboro. Those games were moved to Greenville, South Carolina, which was allowed to host again after removing a Confederat­e flag from state capitol grounds in 2015.

The NCAA’s ban didn’t affect teams that earned home-court advantage during the course of the season, such as the Duke women’s team, which hosted NCAA tourney games earlier in March.

The NCAA had announced last week that the state was down to its final days to make changes to the law before it would be removed from considerat­ion for future bids running through 2022.

Speaking during his annual Final Four news conference Thursday, NCAA President Mark Emmert said the governing body would review the changes in the coming days in hopes of announcing a decision early next week as to whether it would again consider bids from North Carolina.

“I’m personally very pleased that they have a bill to debate and discuss,” Emmert said.

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