The Guardian (USA)

March Madness, college basketball's $933m jewel, will be played without fans

- Guardian sport and agencies

NCAA president Mark Emmert says NCAA Division I basketball tournament games will not be open to the general public because of concerns about the spread of coronaviru­s.

Emmert said in a statement Wednesday that he made the decision to conduct both the men’s and women’s tournament­s, which begin next week, with only essential staff and limited family in attendance. The decision comes after the NCAA’s Covid-19 advisory panel of medical experts recommende­d against playing sporting events open to the general public.

Emmert said the NCAA also was looking into moving the men’s Final Four from Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium to a smaller arena.

The 68-team field for the men’s tournament is scheduled to be announced Sunday and the 64-team women’s tournament field is to be unveiled Monday. Games begin Tuesday and Wednesday on the men’s side in Dayton, Ohio, where earlier Wednesday the governor said he would issue an order to restrict spectator access to indoor sporting events.

The Mid-American Conference on Tuesday announced it was closing its men’s and women’s basketball tournament games at Cleveland’s Rocket

Mortgage FieldHouse, home of the NBA’s Cleveland Cavaliers and scheduled site of the men’s NCAA games, to the general public. The women’s tournament started Wednesday.

The Big West Conference announced a similar move, not allowing the general public into its basketball tournament games to be played this week at the Honda Center in Anaheim,

California.

Conference college basketball tournament­s are in full swing across the country this week. The Atlantic Coast Conference is in Day 2 of its fiveday men’s tournament in Greensboro, North Carolina, and the Pac-12 played the first game of its tournament in Las Vegas on Wednesday.

Later Wednesday, the Southeaste­rn

Conference was to begin its men’s tournament in Nahsville, Tennessee; the Big East was set to start at Madison Square Garden in New York; and the Big Ten was also scheduled to tip off in Indianapol­is. There were no plans to restrict fan access to those events.

March Madness hits another level next week with the start of the NCAA tournament to crown a national champion, one of the most popular events on the American sports calendar.

The NCAA earned a reported $933m in revenue from last year’s tournament with $800m coming from broadcast rights and the rest from ticket sales, corporate sponsorshi­ps and television advertisem­ents. The three-week event accounts for an estimated 75% of the governing body’s annual revenue, which hit $1.12bn for the fiscal year ending on 31 August 2019.

There are eight first- and secondroun­d sites for the men’s tournament, scheduled to be played 19-22 March. Locations include Cleveland; Spokane, Washington; Albany, New York; Sacramento, California; and Omaha, Nebraska. The four regional sites for the second weekend of the tournament are Indianapol­is, Los Angeles, Houston and New York. The Final Four is scheduled to be held in at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, with the semifinals on 4 April and the championsh­ip game 6 April.

The women’s tournament first- and second-round games begin 21 March and will be played at 16 sites, mostly on or close the campuses of the top seeded teams. The regionals will be played in Dallas, Greenville, South Carolina; Portland, Oregon; and Fort Wayne, Indiana. The Final Four will be held in New Orleans on 3 and 5 April.

 ?? Photograph: John Minchillo/AP ?? Fairleigh Dickinson’s Kaleb Bishop (12) and Prairie View A&M’s Iwin Ellis (13) leap for the opening tip-off during last year’s NCAA tournament.
Photograph: John Minchillo/AP Fairleigh Dickinson’s Kaleb Bishop (12) and Prairie View A&M’s Iwin Ellis (13) leap for the opening tip-off during last year’s NCAA tournament.

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