Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Final marks conclusion to bubble life

- By Billy Witz

INDIANAPOL­IS — One of the myriad ways in which this NCAA men’s basketball tournament is different occurred in the wee hours of Saturday morning. Jules Bernard IV, a starting guard for UCLA, had been vomiting and feverish in his downtown hotel room much of the night and his status for his team’s national semifinal game against Gonzaga was in doubt.

In normal times, his mother, Kristene, would have been at his side, curling his hair in her fingers and calling him by one of the pet names she had given him since he was a boy. But she was in Vancouver, British Columbia, working on a film as a makeup artist and could not leave Canada without having to quarantine for two weeks upon returning.

Neither could Bernard’s father, Jules III, or his younger sister, Sophia, be there to comfort him, barred from having any close contact with anyone from the team’s 34-person traveling party. “We’re a very tactile family,” said the elder Bernard, who recalled holding his son’s hand on their walks to school in sixth grade. “There’s a lot of loving, a lot of hugs. We’re a very huggy group of people.”

Instead, Bernard’s father and sister, after scouring the city’s all-night pharmacies for flu medicine, dropped off a package at the hotel that a team manager retrieved. They learned the next day that Jules IV had been struck with food poisoning and had not contracted the coronaviru­s. (His tests came back negative.) “I don’t know if there was any exaggerate­d concern,” Jules III said. “My wife and I were just please, please, please.”

His son, who woke up with chills, was given IV fluids at least twice Saturday — including during the first semifinal game between Baylor and Houston — and played during the Bruins’ epic OT loss to Gonzaga, his performanc­e hampered less by illness than foul trouble.

Bernard’s travails, though, underscore the extraordin­ary measures the NCAA put in place — and the extreme burden placed on athletes — to conduct a men’s basketball tournament that is worth $850 million in television revenue alone after it was canceled last March in the early stages of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Athletes have been overwhelmi­ngly grateful for the opportunit­y to play, but the measures put in place for the men’s and women’s tournament­s — quarantini­ng upon arrival, frequent testing, isolating teams in hotels and cutting off contact with even their families — have highlighte­d a fundamenta­l inequity of the college sports industry: players aren’t paid for their labor.

By virtue of being congregate­d in one city — San Antonio for the women, Indianapol­is for the men — they have been more easily able to direct attention to the inferior resources for the women’s tournament and launch a #NotNCAAPro­perty social media campaign that is trying to apply political pressure on the NCAA to loosen restrictio­ns on athletes cashing in on their fame.

That proximity allowed Iowa’s Jordan Bohannon and Rutgers’ Geo Baker, who are among the leadership in the name, image and likeness campaign, to corner Virginia Tech’s Wabissa Bede and cajole him into joining their movement. Their teams were in different parts of the bracket, so normally they might have been playing in three different cities.

“Everything kind of slowed down for me because the whole time in the bubble, you don’t really do much,” Bede said, adding that with little else to do but homework, he gave more thought to issues that are important to college athletes. “The biggest thing is how athletes have got to use our voices a lot more and I think that’s what we’re doing right now.”

Bede had a relatively short stay in Indianapol­is, about one week, because Virginia Tech lost to Florida in the opening round. Although teams are often sent home after losses, there was added urgency to doing so this year. Oregon State, for example, arrived back at its hotel after losing to Houston in the round of eight last Monday night, then learned that it had to pack up its belongings and be on a 1:15 a.m. charter flight to Eugene, Oregon.

UCLA was at least able to fly back to Los Angeles on Sunday. But the players remained isolated, unable to meet with their families to ensure they didn’t infect the teams that would be playing Monday night, Gonzaga and Baylor.

It was a protocol to which the players had become accustomed.

Bernard’s father said the routine had been the same with his son in Indianapol­is, and since the start of the season. During the season, he often dropped groceries off for his son, meeting him in the driveway outside his apartment building near Westwood. And the adherence by the rest of the team seemed to work — they have not had a positive virus test all year, the elder Bernard said.

But it did make for a dissonant scene Sunday: as Jules Bernard III drove to the airport with his daughter, they were connected by FaceTime to Kristene in Vancouver and their son at the team hotel. “He was waving to us from inside the dark lobby,” he said.

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