The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Storm affects travel

- By John Kekis

The winter storm wreaking havoc in the Northeast forced postponeme­nt of an NHL and an NIT game on Tuesday and the cancellati­on of most flights in and out of Buffalo as several college basketball teams headed in for the start of the NCAA Tournament.

Tuesday night’s game between the Winnipeg Jets and New Jersey Devils was postponed and reschedule­d for March 28 at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey. The NIT game between UNCGreensb­oro and Syracuse also was postponed and reschedule­d for Wednesday night in the Carrier Dome.

NCAA officials said seven of the eight men’s teams competing in Buffalo had arrived for the NCAA Tournament. Defending national champion Villanova, the top overall seed, was among the first to arrive on Monday, while Wisconsin and Notre Dame flew in on Tuesday.

Kent State said it was going ahead with its planned schedule to leave Wednesday morning for its game in Sacramento, California. The Mid-American champion Golden Flashes are scheduled to fly after the worst of the storm has moved east.

There is less of a chance that the women’s tournament would be affected. UConn is the only team in the Northeast hosting, and they play Saturday morning, giving teams more time to arrive in Connecticu­t.

The late-season storm slammed the Northeast with sleet and snow on Tuesday, crippling much of the Washington-to-Boston corridor. It dropped up to two feet of snow in places and grounded more than 6,000 flights.

When it hit Massachuse­tts, the storm had turned into a blizzard with wind gusts over 70 mph along the coast. But the metropolit­an areas of New York City and Philadelph­ia escaped the brunt of the snow, receiving just a few inches.

In New Jersey, where Monmouth hosted Mississipp­i on Tuesday night in the NIT, there was rain and some snow in several areas, which prompted Gov. Chris Christie to call the storm an “underperfo­rmer.”

Quinnipiac coach Tricia Fabbri was thrilled that her teams was headling to Miami as a No. 12 seed.

“It’s going to be great to get out of the Northeast and into the warm sun,” she said. “At least when we’re not in a gym it will be beautiful outside.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States