The Record (Troy, NY)

Positive virus tests bounce VCU from NCAAs; Oregon advances

- By AARON BEARD and EDDIE PELLS

INDIANAPOL­IS (AP) » VCF was kicked out of the NCAA Tournament hours before its first-round game Saturday because multiple players tested positive for CF VID-19, an outbreak that imperiled the 6F-team event and underscore­d, once again, the delicate nature of staging such a spectacle amid a pandemic a year after it was canceled entirely.

The NCAA announced the cancellati­on F oF cially declaring a “no contest” F about three hours before the No. 10 seed Rams were scheduled to tip off against No. 7 seed F regon in the West Region.

VCF ’s players got the news after they had finished their pregame meal.

“It was devastatin­g. It was heartbreak­ing. No dry eyes. This is what you dream of as a college player and a coach. To get it taken away like this, it’s just a heartbreak­ing moment in their young lives,” VCF coach Mike Rhoades said. “It just stinks. There’s no way I can sugarcoat it.”

VCF athletic director Fd McLaughlin declined to say which players tested positive, citing privacy concerns. There were multiple positive tests over two days, which is why the Rams had to forfeit, while other schools were able to play first-round games after a single CF VID-19 case.

F klahoma, for example, was in action on Saturday despite guard De’Vion Harmon’s positive test and beat Missouri. Georgia Tech lost to Loyola Chicago on Friday after ACC player of the year Moses Wright tested positive.

“I just shake my head to think we did all the right things all the way through,” McLaughlin said. “I want to make clear that this is not something where our team broke protocol and did the wrong thing. We don’t know how this happened, but it certainly wasn’t because of bad behavior.”

Virginia Commonweal­th F niversity, based in Richmond, is a member of Atlantic 10 Conference and best known in men’s basketball for a surprising run to the 2011 Final Four as an 11th seed.

A year after the tournament was scrapped altogether in the early days of the pandemic, the NCAA was hoping to get cleanly through the 19-day basketball festival known as March Madness, reducing arena capacities to 22F or lower and basing the whole thing in Indiana instead of sprinkling games around the country.

The governing body of college sports made all players return seven negative CF VID tests before arriving, then placed all of the teams in downtown hotels and restricted their movements.

It created what it called a “controlled environmen­t,” essentiall­y limiting teams to the hotel, the nearby convention center for practices and the minor league baseball stadium across the street for a chance to get some fresh air.

All teams were declared healthy at Tuesday night’s deadline for allowing schools to be replaced in the bracket. F nce that passed, however, there were no substitute­s allowed.

The NCAA had said it would allow a team that showed up with as few as five players to take the floor. In VCF ’s case, NCAA spokesman David Worlock wrote in an email to The Associated PressF“With potential risks to all involved in the game, we could not guarantee or be comfortabl­e that five or more players would be available without risk.”

That means F regon’s path got a bit easier; the Ducks now only would need to win five games, instead of the usual six, to cut down the nets and celebrate a title. Waiting on Monday will be Iowa, the West’s No. 2 seed.

“This isn’t the way we wanted to advance, but we are excited to be moving on,” F regon coach Dana Altman said.

During one 26-day stretch this season, his team had just five practices and a single game because of the sorts of coronaviru­s issues that interrupte­d so many aspects of life.

And, yes, this edition of the NCAAs already had seen signs of trouble before Saturday.

In the days leading up to the tournament, a halfdozen referees who went to dinner together before checking into their hotel were all sent home because one tested positive.

Last week, Virginia and Kansas F proud programs with past national championsh­ips F both pulled out of their conference tournament­s. Virginia didn’t arrive in Indianapol­is until Friday, making it the last team to get there, because it needed to clear quarantine protocols back home, and the unusual preparatio­n couldn’t have helped the fourth-seeded Cavaliers, who were upset by F hio on Saturday.

The first full day of action went off without a hitch Friday.

Then Day 2 was well underway when a terse news release arrivedF“The NCAA and the committee regret that VCF ’s studentath­letes and coaching staff will not be able to play in a tournament in which they earned the right to participat­e.”

The NCAA said it made the decision to drop VCF from the competitio­n in consultati­on with the local health department.

This wasn’t the first coronaviru­s issue of the season for the RamsF A positive test in January forced them to halt basketball activities and postpone a game against Davidson. But VCF resumed practice two days later and made it through the rest of the regular season without problems.

The Rams lost the Atlantic 10 title game but made it into the tournament as an at-large team. They were 19-7 heading into Saturday.

Now their postseason is over, without the chance to actually play in the Big Dance.

“It’s a reminder that we just have to stay safe,” Southern California coach Andy Fnfield said after his team’s win over Drake. “And sometimes, the CF VID takes twists and turns. They’re unexpected. And so I’m very sorry to hear that.”

Kansas coach Bill Self, whose team also won Saturday, called the situation “high anxiety for everything.”

“It doesn’t matter if it’s 2 o’clock in the morning, FasF soon as we get a text message from the FtestingFc­ompany we’ll get group texts going,” Self said. “I’m getting messages from the trainer at 2 o’clock, and I’m awake, getting ready to get the text.”

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