The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

COVID-19 putting college basketball traditions in quarantine

- By Dave Skretta

There is a tradition at Taylor University, a small NAIA school in Indiana, where the entire crowd sits in complete silence until the men’s basketball team scores its 10th point of the game and sets off a wild celebratio­n.

Thanks to the scourge of COVID-19, there will be no Silent Night game this year. Only silence.

The game has been played on the Friday before finals week for decades, but the pandemic forced the university to call it off this year. The standing roomonly crowd, including hundreds of students dressed in their pajamas, will stay at home, unable to sing the old Christmas standard of the same name at the end of the game.

As the college basketball season begins this week, there is a dishearten­ing absence of tradition. The population of Krzyzewski­ville at Duke will be zero, the Oakland Zoo at Pittsburgh a littlemore tame. The Orange Crush at Illinois will be less intimidati­ng and the ghost-like sound of “Rock Chalk Jayhawk” at Kansas will be merely echoes from thousands of previous wins.

“Without doubt, this is a difficult announceme­nt for us to de

liver to our Taylor community,” interim president Paige Comstock Cunningham said in announcing the cancellati­on of Silent Night, “but the health of each student, faculty and staff member, as well as that of our families, must be our primary objective.”

Indeed, very little has been normal since sports returned from a long shutdown with the NBA and NHL playoffs held in largely fanless bubbles and Major League Baseball played before oceans of empty seats. The NFL season brought small numbers of fans, as did the return of college football in some locations, but the sense of electricit­y has still been missing.

That will be even more pronounced for college hoops, where fans packed into arenas ranging from the tiny (G.B. Hodge Center at South Carolina-Upstate, capacity 878) to the massive (Carrier Dome at Syracuse, capacity 35,446) are close enough to the action that they can see and smell the sweat dripping from the players.

Fans in such close proximity create massive homecourt advantages at places such as Allen Fieldhouse (Kansas) and turn venues such as Cameron Indoor Stadium (Duke) into nightmares for opposing teams.

“I’m starting my 41st year here, so I’ve benefited greatly from having that sixth man to create one of the best environmen­ts in sport, not just in basketball,” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “We’ll see. After we play a couple of games, I’ll let you know how good or how bad it is. Iwill tell you this, though: I know overall it’s an advantage for us.”

Just about every school has unique traditions that have been quarantine­d.

Michigan State is only allowing friends and families of players and coaches, meaning the raucous Izzone section will be on hiatus. The handful of people allowed for Indiana games won’t be singing the “William Tell Overture” at the under- 8 timeout of the second half with the same gusto. Chants of “I Believe” at Utah State, “O-H-I- O” at Ohio State and “Boomer Sooner” at Oklahoma will feel very different when they are merely audio recordings.

Fans are locked out of the Palestra, the old Philadelph­ia gym that has served as the Big 5 home for 65 years. Saint Joseph’s, Villanova, La Salle, Penn and Temple have long had their rivalry games intertwine­d in the fabric of Philly sports. But the Quakers arenot playing this season because the entire Ivy League is shut down and the “Big 4” just doesn’t have the same ring to it.

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