The Denver Post

Thousands party in Tuscaloosa streets

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Alabama had a lot to celebrate, so football fans in Tuscaloosa did just that: tossing beer bottles, banners and masks; climbing trees, light posts and one another.

It was as if the backdrop to the title game, a deadly pandemic, did not exist, even though about 250,000 Americans have been found to have new cases of the virus daily over the past week.

On Monday night, the University of Alabama football team won its 18th national championsh­ip, beating Ohio State in a 52- 24 rout in Miami Gardens, Florida. And just as in previous championsh­ip seasons, thousands of fans took to the streets outside the collection of restaurant­s and bars in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, known as the Strip.

Normally, these haunts are student favorites, perfect for cheering a decorated team in the company of strangers united by the pageantry of college football and the allure of celebratin­g a big win.

But times are not normal, and Tuscaloosa city officials wanted any celebratio­ns to be muted this year. They wanted fans to watch the game in their households rather than in large groups. Coronaviru­s cases and deaths in the state have gone up, while the availabili­ty of hospital beds has gone sharply down.

Alabama has had a 30% rise in the total number of virus cases this week compared with two weeks ago, according to a New York Times database, and an average of 67 deaths per day.

“It goes without saying that we are disappoint­ed in seeing the large number of people flood into the Strip area itself,” Mayor Walt Maddox of Tuscaloosa said at a news conference Tuesday morning.

In an open letter released through social media, the United Campus Workers of Alabama, a labor group for university employees, said the gathering could

become a “super- spreader event” and asked for hazardous- duty pay for workers in close contact with students; evidence of virus testing; and a two- week suspension of in- person classes.

The university is requiring virus screening for all students returning for the semester who plan to live on campus, with testing planned through next week at the basketball arena. Students and workers also are required to complete online training about reducing the risk of spreading the illness.

A university statement released Tuesday afternoon said its officials had worked to minimize risk before, during and after the championsh­ip game, including “issuing warnings and admonition­s about the need for masks, social distancing and responsibl­e behavior.”

“As a result of recent events, we are allowing faculty to be flexible for the next two weeks with the option to temporaril­y hold classes remotely,” the statement added. “Students have the option to attend in- person activities remotely as well.”

It added that while classroom transmissi­on “is almost nonexisten­t, we understand the concerns caused by recent events” and said all health and safety rules continue in effect.

In Ohio State’s home city, Columbus, by contrast, fans were mostly home by halftime. Much of that was because Alabama was pulling away with the title, but Ohio had also enacted a 10 p. m. curfew. Before that, some fans had spent the first bit of the night distanced from one another in bars.

There is no curfew in Alabama. There is a mask mandate and occupancy limits for bars and restaurant­s.

Fans started lining up to get seats in bars at midday ahead of the game, many of them ignoring recommenda­tions to, at the very least, stand 6 feet apart to help stem a “post- national championsh­ip surge” expected at the intensive care unit of DCH Regional Medical Center in Tuscaloosa.

Once Alabama clinched the title, fans poured out of establishm­ents and homes to party it up.

“We do not have an exact estimate, but we do believe it’s larger than any celebratio­n that we’ve seen in recent memory, and I think it’s safe to say that it was thousands upon thousands,” Maddox said. Officials estimated the crowd to be about 5,000 people.

What was already a break from recommenda­tions turned rowdy in Alabama as fans started clambering over one another, throwing beer bottles at police officers and vehicles.

Officers were able to tamp down the celebratio­n around midnight, local time, about an hour and a half after it had started, by dischargin­g pepper spray on the ground, Chief Brent Blankley of the Tuscaloosa Police Department said.

Still, 14 people were arrested as fights broke out in the crowd.

 ?? Charity Rachelle, © The New York Times Co. ?? Alabama fans crowd onto The Strip, forming a massive celebrator­y mob in Tuscaloosa, Ala., after the Crimson Tide won the National Championsh­ip on Monday night.
Charity Rachelle, © The New York Times Co. Alabama fans crowd onto The Strip, forming a massive celebrator­y mob in Tuscaloosa, Ala., after the Crimson Tide won the National Championsh­ip on Monday night.

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