Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Trying their luck

Resort casino has plans to serve as a ‘bubble’ for early-season tourneys

- By Pat Eaton-Robb

A resort casino on tribal land in Connecticu­t is completing plans to host more than 30 college basketball teams as it becomes a modified bubble for several early-season tournament­s, including two moved from NewYork.

The Mohegan Sun has teamed with the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, which holds it’s men’s Tip-Off Tournament and Women’s Challenge there every year, and the Gazelle Group, which runs the Empire Classic and the Legends Classic inNew York.

The organizers plan to hold those tournament­s and several other “pods” of games, which will get names in the next fewweeks, at at the Mohegan Sun, which is owned by the Mohegan Tribe and includes a 10,000-seat arena that is home to the WNBA’s Connecticu­t Sun.

“It’s a single site, secluded location, with enormous square footage for social distancing,” said Greg Procino, vice president of basketball operations for theHall of Fame. “There are a lot of things that will work in our favor, ”

Rick Giles, the president of the Gazelle Group, expects about 35 teams from more than a dozen conference­s will participat­e at what they are dubbing “Bubblevill­e” between Nov. 25 and Dec. 5, with up to seven games a day.

There will be at least nine “pods” of games, beginning with the Empire Classic on Nov. 25-26, which will include Villanova, Baylor, Arizona State and Boston College.

UConn, USC, Virginia, Florida, St. John’s, UMass, Vanderbilt, BYU, Louisville, North Carolina State and other men’s and women’s programs also have agreed to play, organizers said.

Southern California coach Andy Enfield said the Trojans are expected to be in a pod with BYU, UConn and Vanderbilt.

“It’ll be a great event once we get there,” Enfield said. “We’re not concerned as long as we know we’ll get tested and the opposing teams are too.”

Officials fromGazell­e and the Hall of Fame were meeting Friday with casino officials to settle some of the details.

“We’ve been able to combine and leverage both our organizati­ons and strengths to create something bigger than what we originally had,” Giles said. “I don’t know if either organizati­on individual­ly could have pulled off whatwe’re about to do next month.”

The Mohegan Sun has already developed protocols for coronaviru­s testing, cleaning andmanagin­g sports during the pandemic. It also has its own medical staff and facilities to treat and isolate anyone who may be infected.

The resort teamed with Viacom over the summer to produce televised events for boxing and mixed martial arts.

Tom Cantone, the senior vice president for sports and entertainm­ent atMohegan Sun, said this is not a full bubble, like theNBAandW­NBA in Florida, but a highly controlled environmen­t.

“We’re just following the playbook we’ve already establishe­d and has been working brilliantl­y,” Cantone said. “We will just continue to do what we’ve been doing with our doctors and protocols. So far, it’s worked flawlessly.”

Each team will be tested upon arrival. Each school will have its own secured floor in the resort’s 34-story tower hotels along with meeting and catered dining areas.

The resort’s 125,000-square-foot exposition center will be converted into a practice facility, with courts on which some games also will be played. The teams will move around through designated “back of the house” corridors so they don’t interact with the public.

The organizers plan to use a pool of about 25 officials, who also will be housed at the resort for those two weeks.

The casino had already installed safety devices as part of its reopening in June, including ultraviole­t lighting and special filters in itsHVACsys­tem.

The organizers are not planning to allowfans at the games, but that could change if metrics suggest it would be safe to allow a limited number of people, Procino said. Media will be seated in sky boxes, and postgame news conference­s will be done by teleconfer­ence.

It has not yet been determined how often and what kind of coronaviru­s testing will be done because each conference has its own requiremen­ts.

“That’s been a real challenge,” Giles said. “Iwould love to see a unified set of consistent protocols that all conference­s can sign onto. Thatwouldm­ake interconfe­rence play much easier.”

 ?? Uncasville, Conn. MARY ALTAFFER/AP ?? Welcome signs direct guests to the parking lots at The Mohegan Sun in
Uncasville, Conn. MARY ALTAFFER/AP Welcome signs direct guests to the parking lots at The Mohegan Sun in

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States