The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Teams hit by COVID pauses take hope from antibodies

- By Dave Skretta

INDIANAPOL­IS >> Baylor coach Scott Drew could sympathize with Kansas counterpar­t Bill Self when the Jayhawks had a positive COVID-19 test during the Big 12 Tournament, forcing them to withdraw and putting their NCAA Tournament hopes in limbo.

After all, the Bears went through their own pause this season. Twice.

They struggled mightily coming out of it, too, barely squeaking by Iowa State before Kansas dealt them their only regular-season loss. They still have not looked like the national title contender they were before the pauses.

“My heart went out to them,” Drew said of the Jayhawks, “because I know how the players feel about that, and how tough it is on them, and I know the concerns the coaching staff will have to have with safety going forward.”

Then again, maybe coaches won’t be quite as concerned.

All those pauses that 27 of the 68 teams in the NCAA Tournament went through during the season could end up benefittin­g them now that they’ve arrived in Indianapol­is. Players, coaches and staff members who tested positive still have lingering antibodies, making them less susceptibl­e to getting COVID-19 again — and potentiall­y forcing their team to withdraw from the biggest tournament of their lives.

“While you can become reinfected with COVID, and it looks like new variants may be able to evade some of the immune response, reinfectio­ns are not that frequent,” said Dr. Tara Kirk Sell, a former Olympic swimmer and an assistant professor in the Department of Environmen­tal Health and Engineerin­g at Johns Hopkins. “I’d imagine players who have had COVID-19 are less likely to get it now.”

Nobody knows quite how effective antibodies are, nor how long they last. But recent research suggests someone who has recovered from COVID-19 has a measure of immunity for eight months, possibly longer.

That could be good news for nearly half the field, and especially good for Baylor, Florida State, Drexel, Grand Canyon, Iona and Norfolk State. Those six schools endured two pauses; the Gaels of coach Rick Pitino went 16 days during one and 51 days during the other, the longest that any team was inactive this season.

Those who got the virus felt lousy for days or weeks. When they came back, it often took several games for teams to get their legs — and lungs — back in shape.

Evan Miyakawa, a doctoral candidate in statistics at Baylor, broke down how teams fared this season when they emerged from pauses. He found an average drop in adjusted efficiency margin for teams following outbreaks was 0.016, which correspond­s to a point-margin drop of 1.12 in a typical game.

In other words, a team that analytics projected to win by 4.2 points before the pause was projected to win by 3.1 afterward. The Bears wound up being one of the most negatively affected teams.

Other teams, such as Iona, actually fared better coming out of pauses. But regardless of how they performed — better or worse — what they all have in common are the antibodies that those teams brought with them to the dance.

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