The Denver Post

School closures mount

- By Sean Keeler Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post

With only family and essential team personnel allowed in the Denver Coliseum, Mullen players celebrate Thursday after winning their Class 4A basketball semifinal against Berthoud. Mullen won 64-57 in overtime and will face Holy Family in the finals Saturday.

The gang at the Grill Works outside Portal 2 looked like a convention of Maytag repairmen, the loneliest souls in the ZIP code.

“Sad,” the woman behind the counter sighed. “It’s sad.”

Business was humming, all right. Humming a lullaby. After two and a half hours and two Class 4A girls semifinals at the Denver Coliseum, she counted serving no more than 50 patrons, tops.

“We’d have lines, normally,” the vendor over her right shoulder chimed in, waving a free hand to indicate a queue that would ordinarily snake to the back of the hall. “We needed something here.”

Mounds of popcorn and gallons of soda sat relatively unloved and untouched. Meanwhile, Coliseum staffers with disinfecta­nt spray popped in and out of restrooms and bounced from doorknob to doorknob Thursday.

Spray and wipe. Spray and wipe. Repeat.

“It was really weird,” Holy Family forward Tyler Whitlock said.

With the cancellati­on of sporting events rising across the globe because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, CHSAA went for the compromise approach with its boys and girls basketball championsh­ips: Officials capped Thursday crowds for the 4A and 5A girls Final Four at four free passes per player.

Mix in friends and family with staff and personnel, and attendance averaged about 200 patrons per game in a building that seats 9,300 for basketball. Thursday night sessions at the 4A and 5A Final Four typically draw 1,200 to 1,500 per game under normal conditions.

These, most certainly, were not. “Last year, it was packed. It was a very different atmosphere,” said Whitlock, whose Tigers advanced to face Mullen on

Saturday the 4A title game with a 38-31 win over Green Mountain. “It felt a lot different since there were so many empty seats and everything. But our crowd showed up, and it was fun.”

For their comparativ­ely small sizes, those in attendance sure as heck didn’t lack for spirit. Especially because swaths of them spent as long as two hours penned into the cavernous concrete ring at court level below the main court, usually the domain of CHSAA staff, players, coaches, administra­tors and assorted media members.

To alleviate crowd-to-crowd contact, organizers had guests check in at the player and staff entrance on the lower level. After being stamped, they got lined up and told to wait near doors in the lower concrete ring. They weren’t allowed into the arena until the game going on ahead of them had finished and the crowds for that contest had already been cleared out.

“We’ve been here since 5:15,” Jake Campbell, father of Grandview guard Libby Campbell, said as the clock edged toward a quarter to 7. “Of course, we can’t watch (the game going on), so we’ve got to kind of walk around.

“It is what it is. I understand the fear. Personally, I am a little skeptical of the virus, but that’s just me, personally. But I also understand that it’s manifested itself into our (thoughts).”

At a table a few yards away, another stranger to the bowels of the building, vendor Dave Kukulski, thought about the big picture. Based in Phoenix, his Kukulski Brothers souvenir company works championsh­ip events in six states. He’d logged more than four decades in the souvenir game and 17 different CHSAA basketball tourneys — but he’d never seen anything like Thursday.

“I don’t begrudge CHSAA or anybody else,” Kukulski said. “We don’t really know who had (the virus) and who doesn’t so we’re just hopeful that everything will work out all right. And I’m sure it’s going to take a while (before) it starts to level off. I’ve poured my heart and soul into this business, but it’s not worth somebody’s life.”

Or somebody’s growling stomach, stuck clear on the other side of the building.

“I heard there was one concession stand open,” Jake Campbell said. “So I asked the young lady here, ‘How do I get there?’ And she said, ‘You can’t.’”

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 ??  ?? The Berthoud vs. Mullen girls basketball semifinal game in Class 4A was played in a nearly empty Denver Coliseum on Thursday. Spectators were capped at four per player. The arena seats 9,300 for basketball.
The Berthoud vs. Mullen girls basketball semifinal game in Class 4A was played in a nearly empty Denver Coliseum on Thursday. Spectators were capped at four per player. The arena seats 9,300 for basketball.

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