What potential hurdles does a college basketball season face?

Over the last couple of weeks, all attention has been focused on the ongoing saga relating to the tumultuous 2020 college football season.

Over the last couple of weeks, all attention has been focused on the ongoing saga relating to the 2020 college football season due to the coronavirus pandemic, which has been tumultuous, to say the least.

With the football season in jeopardy, the basketball season has been a bit of an afterthought to many in the sports media. But not to college administrators, who are already concerned about the prospect of men’s and women’s hoops this fall.

A report from ESPN on Thursday provided an overview of the obstacles facing the college basketball season and what the powers that be are saying about the current plan.

An immediate challenge is the same one that doomed all levels of football below the Power Five: having the resources to maintain testing standards and safety protocols. While wealthier programs may be able to foot the bill for this, smaller schools can’t.

This inequity would be even more pronounced in college basketball than in football, as there is no distinction between FCS and FBS programs within Division I. As Jeff Borzello notes, the biggest threat to the season is still ensuring player safety at the institutional level.

The biggest hurdle, obviously, will be the virus itself. As one conference official noted, not much has changed between when the sport shut down on March 12 and today — beside the risk of serious heart issues stemming from the coronavirus. — Jeff Borzello

But aside from the primary threat of the virus, secondary logistical issues facing administrators are complicating the plans for the sport.

For example, the Pac-12 and Ivy League have already delayed the beginning of the season until at least Jan. 1. Based on the sentiment of figures in other leagues, they probably won’t be the last to do so.

UConn women’s basketball coach Geno Auriemma said he is expecting a January start at the earliest across the board. If that were the case, conferences would in all likelihood move to cancel nonconference games.

This would make any potential NCAA Tournament selection process extremely difficult, as such a format would render the NET meaningless. For mid-major conferences, they would have very few opportunities to prove their worth to the committee.

While Big Ten teams would play 16 of 20 games against Quadrant 1 opponents, the Colonial Athletic Association would likely feature zero Quad 1 games. But as one conference official pointed out, differentiating among potential NCAA tournament teams is why there’s a selection committee. — Jeff Borzello

The common theme among conference and school administrators seems to be limiting travel and keeping the season relatively region-locked.

The idea of attempting to replicate the NBA’s successful bubble experiment, which has resulted in zero positive results over the last four weeks, is reportedly gaining momentum among decision-makers.

Multiple potential formats are being discussed, including dividing conferences into smaller groups, each with their own bubble.

One option floated was to split a conference into three groups, put the groups in mini-bubbles for a weekend, play a round-robin format and then do it again two weeks later. Several sources mentioned ideas focused on mini-bubbles and teams playing several games in the same weekend. Another idea mentioned was to have two large bubbles per conference, one in December and one in January, in order to get a full conference season in. It’s unclear if any of these ideas will work, but the emphasis on keeping things regional and isolated is of utmost importance — as well as not testing the limits of amateurism. — Jeff Borzello

As Borzello noted, however, this would be a serious challenge to the purportedly amateur status of college athletes. The same hurdle seems to have tabled such discussions for football.

Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott echoed this sentiment, saying, “Unlike professional sports, college sports cannot operate in a bubble.”

Still, hypothetical talks of a bubble will surely disappoint college hoops fans, as it seems to signal that allowing fans in the arena is not a possibility currently on the table.

As the ESPN report notes, the men’s NCAA Tournament nets $1 billion annually in revenue. Having the tournament is the top priority at the moment, as revenue for schools from ticket sales pales in comparison to conference payouts from the postseason.

The men’s tournament brings in nearly $1 billion worth of revenue, and the financial boost it provides to its member schools is significant. The NCAA distributes tournament money to its conferences in “units,” with each one being worth roughly $280,000, a number that rises by a couple of thousand each year. And that amount if paid out annually over six years, so even teams that are one-and-done earn around $1.7 million per season for their conferences. Having fans in the stands is lower on the priority list.

While the report provides some clarity as to how college administrators currently view the COVID-19 situation as it relates to basketball, we will likely have a much better idea about the fate of the season once that of the football season is resolved. Should it be postponed or canceled entirely, it would be a bad sign about the prospect of a basketball season.

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NCAA President states no fall championships, FBS not affected

NCAA President Mark Emmert released a video in which he stated there will be no fall championships in 2020. CFP is not a part of that.

The NCAA released a video on social media stated that there will be no fall championships. This ruling impacts all of FCS fall sports and Division I soccer and volleyball. This does not have any bearing on the state of the College Football Playoffs. The Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) operates independently from the NCAA in terms of football championships.

“We cannot, at this point, have fall championships”-NCAA President Mark Emmert

In the video he discussed moving the fall season to spring while keeping the athletes engaged with their coaches, focusing on their academic studies and being prepared to play in the spring.

The College Football Playoff committee has yet to state whether or not there will be a playoff but they are finalizing their protocols for the upcoming season. They will release the final standings on Sunday December 20th.

As it sits right now the ACC, Big 12 and SEC are the only Power Five conferences still planning on playing in the fall. American Athletic Conference, Conference USA, and the Sun Belt still remain from the Group of Five conferences.

It is a very real possibility that the three remaining Power Five conferences could be the only ones left standing. If that were to be the case you could see a scenario where the winner of each conference could get a bid into the playoff with the highest ranked team remaining make it as the fourth team.

This all hinges on what the CFP committee decides and that will likely come in the next few weeks as football season approaches. We are still not in the clear but appears as if we will have fall football at this point.

NCAA approves waiver requests, grants increased recruiting flexibility over dead period

The NCAA has added some new policies designed to grant flexibility to schools over the recruiting dead period and the global pandemic.

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According to the NCAA, their DI Council Coordination Committee has approved multiple new blanket waiver requests, along with providing increased recruiting flexibility during the recruiting dead period.

The three blanket waivers that were granted for all Division I members includes, according to NCAA.org:

  • Basketball and football student-athletes to participate in currently defined summer athletic activities without being enrolled in summer school.

  • Schools to provide less than the currently legislated minimum financial aid requirements to maintain membership in Division I. This waiver does not provide relief from other financial aid rules, including financial aid commitments to prospective and current student-athletes or regulations related to the cancellation or reduction of financial aid.

  • Reclassifying schools to count as Division I opponents in the first year of the reclassification process, whether or not the school meets Division I scheduling requirements.

The committee also added new policies to increase flexibility for recruiting from May 11 to the current end of the dead period on May 31st, mostly related to allowing additional people to join recruiting calls with an uncommitted athlete.

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Oklahoma leads, Pepperdine rises in men’s Division I Bushnell Golfweek Coaches Poll

Oklahoma leads the latest men’s Division I Bushnell Golfweek Coaches Poll while Pepperdine rises in rankings to the No. 2 spot.

After finishing the fall as the No. 1 ranked team in the country and the spring season underway, the Oklahoma Sooners continue their reign as the top-ranked men’s team in the country in the first Bushnell Golfweek Coaches Poll of 2020.

The Sooners received six first-place votes, followed by second-ranked Pepperdine, who received 16 first-place votes, and Georgia Tech, who received one first-place vote. Duke and Wake Forest round out the top five.

Texas Tech, Colorado State, Notre Dame, Arizona State and Arizona all earned a spot in the top ten.

Vanderbilt (22) and Tennessee (25) both rejoined the ranking this week, while Arkansas and Oregon State fell from the top 25.

Coaches Poll

Rank

University (First-place votes)

Points

Previous Rank

1

Oklahoma (6)

554

1

2

Pepperdine (16)

546

4

3

Georgia Tech (1)

531

3

4

Duke

462

5

5

Wake Forest

439

6

6

Texas Tech

422

2

7

Colorado State

412

8

8

Notre Dame

410

7

9

Arizona State

405

10

10

Arizona

387

14

11

Texas A&M

342

T-16

12

Baylor

314

11

13

Texas

289

19

14

North Carolina

274

12

15

BYU

264

9

16

SMU

262

13

17

Auburn

204

T-16

18

Washington

181

18

19

Louisville

172

15

20

Georgia

155

20

21

Clemson

101

22

22

Vanderbilt

76

NR

23

LSU

70

25

24

UCLA

64

21

25

Tennessee

41

NR

Dropped from ranking: Arkansas (23); Oregon State (24).

Others receiving votes: East Tennessee State, 22; California, 18; Arkansas, 17; North Florida, 7; Oklahoma State, 7; Florida, 6; Oregon State, 6; Florida State, 5; Illinois, 4; South Carolina, 3; Mississippi, 2; South Florida, 1.

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