USA TODAY US Edition

Baseball clubhouses closed

No reporters and visitors allowed, and the players don’t like it.

- Dan Wolken Columnist USA TODAY

Next week, about 1,800 college basketball players and a few hundred more coaches will fly in from college campuses across the country and congregate around multiple NCAA tournament sites.

Given the spread of COVID-19 around the United States and the uncertaint­y of how many people actually have it due to lack of testing, it’s conceivabl­e that someone participat­ing in a tournament game will be carrying the virus. Let’s say that hypothetic­al person then tests positive a week later, at which point they’ve already come into close contact with two other teams who are in the Sweet 16. What then?

Given that members of Congress are going into quarantine because they were in the same room with someone who later tested positive for COVID-19, it’s a question worth asking. What would you do with more than 20 basketball players and coaches who could potentiall­y have been exposed to it but are still playing for a national championsh­ip?

As you grapple with that scenario – admittedly a hypothetic­al, but not one that is particular­ly far-fetched right now – it leads to an inevitable question.

Is it irresponsi­ble to play the NCAA men’s and women’s tournament­s this year?

The tone of the debate around what to do with college basketball’s showcase event has undeniably changed as of Tuesday.

The Ivy League canceled its conference tournament. The governor of Ohio, Mike DeWine, put out a statement “asking for no events with spectators other than the athletes, parents, and others essential to the game,” which is significan­t since the First Four is in Dayton next Tuesday and Wednesday. The Mid-American and Big West conference­s closed their tournament­s to spectators.

The NCAA, after releasing a statement putting the onus on “schools and conference­s” to determine what they should do with their conference championsh­ips, released another a few

hours later with an entirely different tone.

“The NCAA continues to assess how COVID-19 impacts the conduct of our tournament­s and events. We are consulting with public health officials and our COVID-19 advisory panel, who are leading experts in epidemiolo­gy and public health, and will make decisions in the coming days.”

That suggests status quo is changing. The only question is to what degree.

Here’s the problem with the COVID-19 situation. We don’t know how many people have it or are going to get it, but we know it is spreading in the U.S. While the vast majority of people who get it will recover or suffer only mild symptoms, they can easily spread it to vulnerable groups who are more at-risk of serious illness or death.

For that reason, businesses are restrictin­g employees from travel. Schools in some communitie­s that have had cases are sending kids home, and colleges are taking their classes online. This isn’t about panic. Given the lack of treatment or vaccine, the only best answer doctors have given us for slowing this thing down is fewer person-to-person interactio­ns, especially in places where we know there are cases.

Day by day, it is clear this is how every sector of society is going to operate in the short term. It is what we’re dealing with right now as a country. The idea that sports would somehow be an exception to that is arrogant at minimum and dangerous at worst.

The NCAA tournament is an event where thousands of college students from more than a hundred schools – band members, cheerleade­rs, athletes – and tens of thousands of fans leave their towns and hop across the country to watch games in arenas where fans are elbow-to-elbow before returning home and interactin­g with their communitie­s.

Given what we know, and especially what we don’t, that setup becomes increasing­ly risky, selfish and counterpro­ductive to a society that may only be beginning to come to terms with the bigger picture. Again, depending on who you are, the problem with COVID-19 isn’t necessaril­y that you might get it, it’s who might get it from you.

But even if the NCAA decides to play games without fans, is that enough of a line being drawn? How risky is it really to put these amateur athletes from various parts of the country on the court to play against one another without testing every single participan­t? Given the testing capacity right now, is that even going to be possible by Thursday?

And, God forbid, what happens if a player or coach who was on the court with a bunch of other players and coaches tests positive? In a tournament that takes place over three consecutiv­e weeks, is that really a roll of the dice the NCAA wants to take?

These are real questions the NCAA needs to ask itself before going forward with its tournament next week. Look, sports are very important and canceling the NCAA tournament is a nightmare scenario. Hundreds of millions of dollars are at stake. It would be awful to make that call.

But what’s the balance between overreacti­ng and under-reacting? We might not be able to know that answer for certain before it’s too late.

 ?? JOHN DAVID MERCER/USA TODAY SPORTS ??
JOHN DAVID MERCER/USA TODAY SPORTS
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 ?? BOB DONNAN/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Virginia head coach Tony Bennett celebrates with fans after the Cavaliers beat Texas Tech in last year’s NCAA title game.
BOB DONNAN/ USA TODAY SPORTS Virginia head coach Tony Bennett celebrates with fans after the Cavaliers beat Texas Tech in last year’s NCAA title game.

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