Wapakoneta Daily News

COVID shook up sports world one year ago

- By EDDIE PELLS National Writer

It’s the predictabl­e rhythm of sports that draws us in.

Not so much the results of the games themselves as the steady cadence of the seasons -- the cutting down of nets and hoisting of trophies, the pregame hype and postgame deconstruc­tions, the trade talk and injury crises that envelop each passing year with the regularity of an atomic clock.

So, when two NBA basketball teams were hastily sent back to their locker rooms, not to return, after pregame introducti­ons on March 11, 2020, and, then, a day later, when two college basketball teams walked off the floor at halftime and also didn’t come back -“Game Ppd, pandemic” -- it was a shock to the system.

It was one thing for the still-nascent collection of COVID-19 numbers, the interviews with lawmakers and the warnings from Dr. Anthony Fauci to overtake CNN, Fox News and MSNBC. Quite another for all those updates to find their way onto ESPN.

It was a sign that the steadily streaming loop of games we play, and watch – games that have been played amid crisis, in the aftermath of catastroph­e and that even resumed less than a week after the 9/11 terrorist attacks -could no longer be taken for granted. For the first time in anyone’s memory, sports were as much at the mercy of an uncontroll­ed, unpredicta­ble and ever-changing health crisis as any other segment of life.

A year after the worldwide coronaviru­s pandemic stopped all the games in their tracks, the aftershock­s are still being felt across every sector.

It’s true in the pros and colleges, where leagues and conference­s found themselves scrambling to figure out how to resume in bubbles, pods and cohorts. Once jam-packed, stadiums are now being used as mass vaccinatio­n venues or, in cases where they’ve reopened their gates to significan­t numbers of fans, scapegoate­d as potential supersprea­der sites. The goal of it all is a return to something resembling “normal,” to get back to providing the masses with the programmin­g they sorely missed while still accounting for the high risk the players take for the sake of our round-the-clock entertainm­ent (and, yes, their millions in salaries and profit).

It’s also true at the grassroots, where little leagues, swim teams, gymnastics camps and running clubs all went dark, leaving the very existence of their businesses, to say nothing of the sports they fortify from the ground all the way to the elite and Olympic levels, up in the air.

And at the outdoor playground­s and courts and courses, which were shuttered, roped off and padlocked for weeks, sometimes months, before slowly gaining cachet as a new, somewhat safer haven for millions of restless citizens shut in by government mandate, or fear, or concern, or some combinatio­n of the three.

Some of what was lost, or stopped, has come back over the ensuing 12 months, with the rapid developmen­t of a vaccine and a sometimes-begrudging acceptance of mask-wearing and social distancing becoming norms that are now being relaxed in certain parts of the U.S. In many cases, lessons learned in sports have been ap

plied to society in general, and helped make things better. The NFL, for instance, offered a veritable instructio­n manual for bringing large groups back into the workplace. (You must have resources, however.)

But the sporting life at all these levels does not look the same, and some of it might never look “normal” again.

“Urinals, water fountains and hot dog stands where someone hands you food directly; buying game programs and taking ticket stubs home; athletes signing autographs and passing a pen back to you,” said sports marketing guru Joe Favorito, spelling out just a short list on how the fan experience has changed for good.

Said media expert Dennis Deninger: “We will never return to the old model of sending commentato­rs, analysts and producers to every game that is going to be broadcast.” It will save money but come at a cost, he said: “The broadcast product cannot help but be diminished if those who we as fans count on to be our eyes and ears at an event are not there.”

Indeed, we as sports journalist­s have become comfortabl­e forgoing the locker rooms for interviews via Zoom. The whole concept of “access” will generate debate for what’s left of the media when the world regains its health and sports discovers its new normal.

The prospect of sports without reporters or fans in the stands went from a far-flung germ of an idea to an everyday reality. I worked on a story a year ago this week that never saw the light of day. Topic: What would the NCAA Tournament look like without fans? There was no NCAA Tournament. There will be one this year, albeit in front of 25% capacity crowds and with the entire three weeks’ worth of games packed into one city, Indianapol­is.

One takeaway that is as relevant today as it was a year ago came from the esteemed media commentato­r Bob Thompson of Syracuse: A big part of the show IS the fans – the crying flute players, the painted chests, the cheerleade­rs. Without all that, he said, sports wouldn’t feel quite the same, the TV program wouldn’t be as fun, maybe the popcorn wouldn’t taste as good, even if the games did go on as planned.

How right he was. To be sure, Lebron James, Tom Brady and the LA Dodgers may very well have won titles even had the seasons not been contested amid the very different, pandemical­tered sports landscape that underscore­d the 2020-21 sports calendar. The championsh­ips were as richly deserved as any they’ve collected, maybe even more so given the new protocols and hurdles that had to be cleared to get to kickoff or first pitch, or even the next day’s practice.

But a shortened season, or a playoff series in a bubble, or a game played on the road against the backdrop of piped-in crowd noise and completely empty stands is … just that. Not normal. Not what we’re used to. Not quite the “real thing.”

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee is holding out hope that its 2020 Games, now planned for the summer of 2021, might bring a semblance of normalcy back to sports and the world in general. Like or dislike the leaders who run that enterprise, there might not be a return as badly needed as this one.

To be sure, the billionair­es will still get theirs whether the games go on or not. But the thousands of athletes who make up the backbone of the Olympics, and the smaller, grassroots organizati­ons that fund their training – some of them multimilli­ondollar operations, but many more just maand-pop-sized nonprofits – cannot survive much longer without the revenue and spotlight afforded by this global sports extravagan­za.

For all its warts and conflicts of interest, college sports, and college football specifical­ly, also helps underwrite many members of those Olympic teams, to say nothing of the dreams of thousands of amateur athletes – fencers and rowers and swimmers and even football and basketball players -- whose last chance at glory will come not as a highly paid profession­al, but on campus. Last week, the perennial football powerhouse at the University of Alabama boldly stated it intended to play all its football games during the 2021 season in front of 100% capacity crowds. There’s much money to be made by allowing folks to watch the Tide roll in person. Is this good? Bad? You be the judge.

“Business and education, for example, will never be able to fully wean themselves from the convenient technologi­cal tricks they’ve learned over the last year,” Thompson said in a follow-up email last week. “But sports are another matter. Close physical proximity of the players is a fundamenta­l property of the games, packing in crowds is built into the architectu­re and economies of the venues that present those games, and the behavior of viewers who watch them on TV never changed that much in the first place.”

And when we’re not shuffling into the stands or watching on TV? Simply playing the games we love has become a much different enterprise, as well.

At first, we were warned that it might not be safe even to pass someone while running on an outdoor trail, lest the droplets from a passerby’s deep breath or cough be trapped into your own airstream and lead to a COVID-19 case.

Golf courses closed. Tennis courts were padlocked. Parents took their kids to playground­s, only to find them cordoned off with yellow crimescene tape.

All those lockdowns ended up feeling like mere hiccups in the grand scheme of things. Using proper hygiene – keep the flag in, trade a fist bump for a handshake -- golf turned out to be the perfect social-distancing sport. There were nearly 60 million more rounds played in 2020 – an increase of 14 percent over the previous year -- across America and golf pros spoke of seeing members back at their clubs who they hadn’t seen in years.

There were more hikers, more campers -- anyone try to buy a mountain bike in 2020? These were signs that people were finding more ways to make their own outdoor fun, albeit with a steady dose of caution and social distancing attached.

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? Lebron James celebrates during Sunday’s NBA all-star game in atlanta. one year ago this week, the NBA was the first major sports to shut down due to the COVID-19 coronaviru­s.
Tribune News Service Lebron James celebrates during Sunday’s NBA all-star game in atlanta. one year ago this week, the NBA was the first major sports to shut down due to the COVID-19 coronaviru­s.

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