The Columbus Dispatch

College hoops schedules get chaotic

- John Marshall

The NCAA’S announceme­nt of a college basketball start date led to huge scramble as schools tried to fill out schedules altered by the coronaviru­s pandemic. Instead of getting easier with time, the task of building schedules has become more difficult as the season’s start date nears.

Travel is an issue. So is finding common testing protocols. Restrictio­ns in every state are all different and constantly changing with virus cases on the rise. The cancellati­on of several multiteam events left huge holes. Even sorting out officiating has presented challenges. It’s been like trying to simultaneo­usly build 353 separate puzzles with overlappin­g and sometimes-missing pieces — and time is running out.

“We don’t know a lot of things,” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski. “But we know we’re going to have March Madness. We know we’re going to have a regular season. We just don’t know much about both — and it’s a hell of a way to run a railroad.”

The coronaviru­s ran college basketball, like every other sport and aspect of life, off the rails in March. The NCAA Tournament was wiped out and so was part of the payout to member schools, a whopping $375 million shortfall.

Following the lead of sports like the NFL and Major League Baseball, the NCAA opted to start college basketball’s regular season on Nov. 25. The NCAA reduced the maximum number of games from 31 to 27 for teams playing in multiteam events, 25 for those that don’t.

The plan is to play the NCAA Tournament in March, possibly in a “bubble” environmen­t like the NBA and NHL did. The key is finding a way to get there. Even with meticulous planning before the NCAA’S announceme­nt, teams had a tough time finding opponents.

The season was pushed back, so games set for early November had to be postponed or dropped from the schedule. Lost games had to be replaced with new opponents, with a premium placed on regional schools since most teams don’t want to fly during a pandemic.

Virus testing protocols had to be worked out and finding officials, many of whom work multiple games a week in different states and conference­s, was a complex, unexpected issue. In addition to all that, scheduling turned into a shifting platform filled with unexpected trap doors at nearly every turn.

Several multiteam events moved locations — the Maui Invitation­al from Hawaii to North Carolina, the Cancun

Challenge from Mexico to Florida — leading to teams dropping out. Other multiteam events were canceled, leaving scheduling holes.

ESPN last week announced the cancellati­on of a planned Nba-like bubble in Orlando due to schools’ concerns about health and safety protocols. The eliminatio­n of those eight events left two dozen teams scrambling to find replacemen­t games.

Illinois coach Brad Underwood described Illinois’ schedule as a blank sheet of paper last month, and the Illini have since added a Dec. 8 game against Duke in the ACC/BIG Ten Challenge.

Krzyzewski believes the Blue Devils have a 27-game schedule in place, but that’s obviously subject to change. Duke will host a multiteam event at Cameron Indoor Stadium with Bellarmine, Howard and Elon in early December, but it has announced no other games outside of playing Illinois.

Gonzaga, projected to be a top-5 team, has games against Baylor and Iowa scheduled for December and a full home-and-away slate of West Coast Conference games. The WCC reportedly is looking into playing in a Las Vegas bubble for conference games, so that could change. Villanova released its early nonconfere­nce schedule, including the 2K Empire Classic with Baylor, Boston College and Arizona State — a replacemen­t after Michigan pulled out — in Connecticu­t. The Wildcats, like the rest of the Big East, is awaiting word on plans for the conference schedule.

The Big 12, Pac-12 and SEC have announced conference schedules, but the ACC and Big Ten have not.

While adjustment­s continue, the clock is ticking: The season starts three weeks from Wednesday.

 ?? GEOFF BURKE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski reacts during a game last season against Virginia. The task of building schedules has become more difficult as the season’s start date nears.
GEOFF BURKE/USA TODAY SPORTS Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski reacts during a game last season against Virginia. The task of building schedules has become more difficult as the season’s start date nears.

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