Yuma Sun

NCAA reveals COVID-19 contingenc­y plans for upcoming tournament­s

-

Turns out the top four teams left out of March Madness won’t have their bubbles burst quite yet.

Under a contingenc­y plan released Thursday by the Division I basketball committees, those four at-large teams that don’t make the original field in the men’s and women’s NCAA tournament­s will be placed in order and serve as the replacemen­t teams should any conference with multiple bids have a school that is unable to participat­e due to COVID-19 issues.

If the tournament begins without any withdrawal­s, the four would still be eligible to compete in the NIT.

The contingenc­y plan only applies to the short period between the announceme­nt of the brackets – March 14 for men and March 15 for women – and the start of games later that week. Once a tournament begins, any team whose opponent is forced to withdraw would automatica­lly advance to the next round.

If there are COVID-19 issues with a qualifying school leading up to the NCAA Tournament selection, conference­s get to designate a replacemen­t team and it will be seeded in the bracket based upon its own body of work.

Single-bid conference­s likewise can choose their replacemen­t provided the team has gone seven days without a positive test.

Due to the pandemic, the entire men’s tournament will take place in Indianapol­is and the surroundin­g area beginning with First Four games March 18 at Mackey Arena in West Lafayette and Assembly Hall in Bloomingto­n. The Final Four will take place at Lucas Oil Stadium with the championsh­ip game scheduled for April 5.

The women’s tournament, which begins with first-round games March 21, will take place in San Antonio

and neighborin­g cities of Austin and San Marcos. The Final Four is set for the Alamodome with the title game April 4.

The basketball committees formulated their contingenc­y plan based on four core tenets: once the bracket is released, it will not be changed or reseeded; it will attempt to ensure a full field before the tournament with no replacemen­t teams once play begins; every participat­ing conference should have at least one team in the field; and the replacemen­t teams should be the best teams considered for an atlarge that still remain.

Many of the same rules were used by the Division I competitio­n and oversight committee to create a similar plan for winter championsh­ips such as wrestling and gymnastics. The plan also covers men’s and women’s cross country and men’s water polo, which are fall sports but whose champions will be decided in March.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States