Houston Chronicle

Indiana to host all men’s games to limit virus threat

- By Gillian R. Brassil

The NCAA, in an attempt to limit the threat of coronaviru­s among teams, announced an agreement Monday to hold its signature men’s basketball tournament entirely in Indiana in March and early April.

The tournament consists of 67 games and is usually held at sites across the United States, culminatin­g with the Final Four in one city in April. This year’s Final Four — the tournament’s semifinals and final — was already scheduled for Indianapol­is before the pandemic widely shut down American sports last year.

The NCAA, which has its headquarte­rs in Indianapol­is, said the tournament would play out across six venues, detailing a plan it announced in November. The teams are scheduled to be selected on March 14, but the early rounds of the tournament have not been fully scheduled. With fewer courts, it will require some juggling to fit in all the games and practices.

While most games will be in Indianapol­is, some will be held in Bloomingto­n and West Lafayette.

The NCAA is working with health officials in Marion County, where Indianapol­is is, to determine safety protocols and to facilitate coronaviru­s testing throughout the tournament. Indiana has had a 17 percent decrease in new cases of the virus in the past two weeks, according to a New York Times database.

A limited number of familymemb­ers of participan­ts will be allowed at games, according to the announceme­nt. But the organizati­on said officials would decide later whether to allow other spectators.

Teams will practice in the Indiana Convention Center and stay in hotels connected to it, with teams separated by hotel floors, their own dining and meeting rooms and “secure transporta­tion to and from competitio­n venues,” the NCAA said.

The 2021women’s tournament is also set to play in one, centralize­d region, with the NCAA announcing in December that it was in preliminar­y discussion­s with officials in the San Antonio area to host it. As of Monday, thecommitt­ee incharge of the women’s tournament was still in talks with those officials.

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