The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tournament

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is committed to other cities for the next six years.

In the 24 hours after the NCAA’s announceme­nt Wednesday that it would play this season’s tournament without fans in the stands, pressure steadily built to abandon the event.

Pro sports leagues — first the NBA, followed by MLS, the NHL and MLB — called off games because of coronaviru­s concerns. Also, numerous college athletics conference­s, including the ACC and SEC, canceled their league tournament­s. And two of the nation’s top college basketball programs, Kansas and Duke, said they wouldn’t participat­e in the NCAA tournament even if it were held.

So by the time the NCAA announced its decision shortly after 4 p.m., it seemed a foregone conclusion.

“I think from the perspectiv­e of everything that has transpired nationally with the sports landscape (in the past two days), it certainly makes sense in our mind for this to be added to that,” said Dan Corso, president of the Atlanta Sports Council and chairman of the host committee’s board of directors. “We respect the decision.”

NCAA President Mark Emmert and the organizati­on’s Board of Governors made the cancellati­on decision, which also applies to all other remaining winter and spring NCAA championsh­ip events.

“This decision is based on the evolving COVID-19 public health threat, our ability to ensure the events do not contribute to spread of the pandemic, and the impractica­lity of hosting such events at any time during this academic year given ongoing decisions by other entities,” the NCAA said in a statement.

Until now, the men’s tournament had been played every year since 1939.

The 2020 Final Four, which was awarded to Atlanta six years ago, was to have been the third sports mega-event held at Mercedes-Benz Stadium over a 28-month period, following the College Football Playoff championsh­ip game in January 2018 and the Super Bowl in February 2019. Some of the host committee’s staffers, board members and volunteers had worked on all three events.

“I can’t say enough about how special the team that we had put together across these events has been,” Adkins said. “They are certainly disappoint­ed the final one didn’t come to fruition, but we’ve got the best group of people in the business, hands down, not only on this team but throughout all of Atlanta’s hospitalit­y community and sports community.”

The host committee’s budget for the Final Four totaled about $13 million, funded mostly from Atlanta hotel-motel tax revenue and some from corporate contributi­ons.

Most of the budget had not yet been spent, and some of the more expensive budgeted costs — transformi­ng Mercedes-Benz Stadium into a basketball venue and hosting Final Four fan events — won’t be incurred.

Adkins said about $3.2 million has been spent to date, including staff salaries for the past two years, agreements with the Georgia World Congress Center and early events hosted in preparatio­n for the Final Four.

Asked if the host committee will be reimbursed for expenses in light of the event’s cancellati­on, Adkins said: “That is a discussion we’ll have with the NCAA. There may be some (reimbursem­ents). At this point, it’s just premature to really put a number on it.”

The tournament produces

The host committee’s budget for the Final Four totaled about $13 million. Most of the budget had not yet been spent, and some of the more expensive budgeted costs — transformi­ng Mercedes-Benz Stadium into a basketball venue and hosting Final Four fan events — won’t be incurred.

almost $1 billion in annual revenue for the NCAA and its member schools, mostly from TV contracts with CBS Sports and Turner Sports.

In the hours before the NCAA’s decision to cancel, considerat­ion was given to moving a fan-less Final Four from Mercedes-Benz Stadium to a smaller venue in Atlanta, State Farm Arena or Georgia Tech’s McCamish Pavilion. As of late morning, Corso said the NCAA hadn’t broached the idea of canceling the tournament with the host committee. But the committee later began to suspect that would happen when it was told the NCAA Board of Governors would meet at 4 p.m.

“We received a call right after that meeting (with word of the cancellati­on),” Corso said.

The NCAA’s host selection process for the 2027-31 Final Fours is scheduled for next year, and Atlanta plans to submit a bid.

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