Should tourneys have been played? No
Bryce Miller Columnist
LAS VEGAS
No one in college basketball is immune, no matter how blue the blood, no matter how bold the résumé, from a single COVID-19 test result sucking the air out of March Madness.
Just ask Duke. Just ask No. 11 Kansas. Just ask No. 16 Virginia.
On Friday alone, the Cavaliers and Jayhawks fattened a well-heeled list suffering through season-capping pandemic pain.
As casualties pile up, it’s fair to ask whether these conference tournaments should have been played at all in 2021. It’s fantastic drama, a spot on the calendar when Cleveland State can star alongside Ohio State. People pay attention to the Ramblers of Loyola, the Dragons of Drexel and the deliciously patriotic Flames of Liberty.
Moving into March without those NCAA-determining storylines sounds near blasphemous, given the country has salivated for sports normalcy. The agony and upsets leading to the NCAA Tournament provide the type of reality TV millions have craved as the pandemic loosens its grip.
This isn’t any March, however. This is a unique and utterly bizarre moment in time. These games are not the ones in need of full and focused protection.
As No. 19 San Diego State tipped off against Nevada on Friday night in a Mountain West Tournament semifinal here, it was impossible not to worry about the chance the Aztecs or any other team could face the same jolt as Virginia by breakfast. The NCAA Tournament is the end-all, the Hoops Holy Grail, the most golden of geese.
In mere days, Duke withdrew from the ACC Tournament and said it was ending its season after a positive test, while headliners like Kansas and Virginia scrambled to sort through NCAA protocols in time to qualify for next week’s Big Dance.
In that same small window, No. 1 seed North Carolina A&T was tripped up by the virus in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. All that wreckage came before the season’s flurry of games on the final weekend.
No one wants more teams to feel a dose of this singular March misery. Imagine the Aztecs, who have been so meticulous about safeguarding players and staff, being sidelined at the wire. Consider the heartbreak of missing out, again, after a once-in-a-generation team that soared to 30-2 a season ago was handed a lifetime of what-ifs.
As March bloomed, Aztecs coach Brian Dutcher shared concerns about make-up games in the Mountain West. He just as easily could have been talking about the conference tournament.
“COVID cost us the NCAA Tournament last year,” Dutcher said. “… I don’t want it to rear its head and all of a sudden we test positive either after our (trip last week to UNLV) or the conference tournament and we don’t get to go to the NCAA Tournament again because of COVID.”
What about Matt Mitchell and Jordan Schakel, program cornerstones, potentially being robbed of an irreplaceable experience at the apex of their college careers — not once but twice? What about senior transfer Terrell Gomez, who after scoring a season-high 20 points to ward off Wyoming in the quarterfinals, made his sole goal as clear as Buckingham Palace crystal?
On Nevada’s first possession Friday night, Schakel’s quick hands forced a loose ball, Mitchell raced it up court and found Gomez for a baseline jumper. Gomez happily, willingly and hungrily traded off individual stardom at CSUN to become a cog in the Aztecs’ NCAA Tournament-chasing machine.
“This is March now,” he said Thursday. “This is what I came here for. I’ve got to make the most of it.”
Though as few as five healthy players are required to play and travel parties can be trimmed, all involved in the tournament will be required to produce negative tests for seven consecutive days. That means Kansas and Virginia still have enough time to meet the requirement.
That window is closing now, though. Talk about shot-clock pressure.
Fears about potential NCAA Tournament impacts are not simply about teams falling to the virus, but those who could be greatly and irreparably diminished. Contact tracing through a member of the travel party has the potential to wipe out backcourts.
Think about the Aztecs limping into Indianapolis without Mitchell. Without Schakel. Without … Dutcher.
“I just think the risk of exposing ourselves to one more trip doesn’t benefit anybody if our goal is the NCAA Tournament and trying to have teams healthy for that event,” Dutcher recently said.
Keeping eyes on the prize means keeping pupils pointed at the NCAAs. The crushing economic ripples of losing last year’s tournament sent financial shock waves across the country. The event’s massive TV contract and the shares divvied between conferences and programs because of it constitutes critical, life-giving blood.
If shutting down the conference tournaments for one lap are off the table, why not play a week earlier to allow more time for quarantining? Why not create more distance and cushion between those games and the NCAA Tournament?
Make-up games played by groups like the Mountain West eager to fulfill TV contracts made that impossible, of course, so chalk that up as another strike against the conference office that can’t shoot straight.
Losing teams on the cusp of, or during the NCAAs also would alter competitive fairness. Issues born out of conference tournaments could mean some teams skipping a game and advancing with fresh legs into the next round.
With so much at stake, the playing field would become anything but even.
Shield and insulate the NCAA Tournament, then work back from there. No? Ask Kansas and Virginia what they think, right about now. There’s the unfortunate likelihood other teams could collide with similar fates.
So now, the Aztecs and everyone else hold their collective breath.
For only one year with so much on the line, everyone could have breathed much easier.
bryce.miller@sduniontribune.com