Morning Sun

NEC, Horizon still having forfeits because of COVID

- By Doug Feinberg

NEW YORK » Linda Cimino hasn’t lost a Northeast Conference game on the court this season at St. Francis, N.Y.

Yet the Terriers are sitting at 4-2 in the standings after forfeiting two games before the New Year because of COVID-19 issues on the team. They play first-place Fairleigh Dickinson on Friday night.

“It’s obviously disappoint­ing to take two forfeit losses,” Cimino said. “What makes it more frustratin­g is that you take away playing opportunit­ies from the student athletes, especially after they’ve done everything we’ve asked them to do in terms of getting vaccinated.”

The NEC is still assigning a forfeit to teams if they can’t play because of the coronaviru­s. There have already been a half dozen games forfeited. The Horizon League, which is the only other conference potentiall­y forcing a forfeit, is leaving it up to the commission­er to decide whether a team forfeits or the game is declared a no-contest.

What makes it more difficult for NEC schools is their conference tournament is played at the higher seeded team’s homecourt, so it could give a distinct advantage to teams. The Horizon League semifinals and finals are on a neutral court.

The NEC has discussed and voted on the issue a few times since the season started, but the league decided to keep the forfeit rule. The league made a change this year back to having every team qualify for the tournament instead of just the top four teams.

“Everyone has that opportunit­y,” NEC Commission­er Noreen Morris said in a phone interview. “That was the first thing we needed to do. Gives them the peace of mind that they’ll be in the postseason by allowing all the eligible teams to be eligible for the championsh­ip.”

Morris understand­s the coaches’ frustratio­n with the forfeits but feels that no solution is going to make everyone happy. The academic piece of potentiall­y missing classes to make-up games is something the league wasn’t comfortabl­e doing.

“We are trying to manage what are the best options, what are the pros and cons?” she said. “There is no good answer here. When you look at the pros and cons of forfeit vs no-contest, teams impacted negatively are saying you are penalizing us.

“We wanted to incentive people to get vaccinated, but omicron is different as you’re not as protected. Teams are saying you’re penalizing us for something that isn’t in our control.”

The Horizon policy is a little different. If there is a COVID-19 outbreak on a team that has a low vaccinatio­n rate and there aren’t enough players to put on the court, a forfeit would be likely. There can be a lot of moving parts, and not every team’s situation is the same, so the commission­er considers everything.

“It’s not black and white. There is a lot of gray area,” Horizon League Assistant Commission­er Dan Gliot said. “Our biggest thing is to promote getting vaccinated.”

The league doesn’t want to penalize teams that do everything in their power to not have a COVID-19 outbreak. So far, only a few schools have had to forfeit games.

Both conference­s have historical­ly been one-bid leagues, so winning the postseason tournament is the only chance to make the NCAAS.

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