• Loading stock data...
Monday, September 15, 2025
One Day till Tuned In! Get a Last Second Ticket!

College Basketball Tips Off as Pandemic Peaks

  • The hastily thrown-together schedules for the 2020-21 season crumble teams nationwide postpone season-openers due to positive COVID-19 tests.
  • Multiple virus-induced factors, from logistical issues to high rates of community spread, could make this season a nightmare.
college basketball season struggles
David Butler II-USA TODAY Sports

The NCAA is tipping off college basketball in the midst of the nation’s most severe COVID-19 outbreak. And already, the virus is infiltrating teams across the country: Positive tests from teams like UConn women and Baylor men have caused teams to pull out of non-conference tournaments and cancel season-openers. 

College basketball, itself a high-risk COVID-19 transmitter, could face even more concerns than similarly distraught FBS football this season with regards to logistics, finances, and community spread. 

“We’re kind of playing into the teeth of this virus,” Notre Dame men’s basketball coach Mike Brey recently told reporters.

The NCAA is likely pushing so hard for a season because it needs to hold a men’s NCAA tournament this year in order to survive financially. Without 2020 men’s March Madness, the governing body distributed $375 million less to its Division I programs than it planned — and that’s money that non-Power 5 programs, specifically those considered basketball schools, rely on. 

“We all know that the NCAA needs to do it for the money,” Clemson men’s basketball coach Brad Brownell recently told reporters.

So if enough men’s teams can assemble a season of at least 13 games, they’ll likely head to Indianapolis this March, where the NCAA plans to move the entire men’s tournament from its myriad geographical locations. And while there’s no official word on the women’s tournament, Pac-12 Senior Associate Commissioner Teresa Gould told Front Office Sports that she believes the governing body might be considering a similar setup for women’s March Madness.

As teams try to navigate community spread, their sport itself can be its own spreader. 

While there isn’t strong data either way, one can reasonably assume that basketball can spread the virus more easily than football, Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease specialist at Johns Hopkins who served on the NCAA’s COVID-19 task force, told Front Office Sports. Panting players heavily breathe each others’ air for prolonged periods inside indoor arenas with no masks, helmets or shields to protect them.

If a basketball player tests positive, all of their close contacts as defined by the CDC, which often includes other basketball players, are strongly encouraged to quarantine for 14 days, according to NCAA guidelines. 

bubbleville

College Basketball’s ‘Bubbleville’ is Bellwether for Season to Come

If Bubbleville can’t keep COVID-19 at bay, it’s unclear whether any model…
November 19, 2020

This poses a dire logistical issue, and is perhaps why so many teams have canceled games in the past week after one positive test: Basketball teams are smaller than football teams, so even a few isolated contacts could cause a team to be unable to play for weeks and lose four or five games, NC State men’s basketball coach Kevin Keatts told reporters.

“There’s no way we’re going to be able to play with this 14-day quarantine,” Seton Hall women’s basketball coach Tony Bozella told reporters in late October. 

Big East Commissioner Val Ackerman previously said “attempts” are underway to develop a protocol for athletes to test out of quarantine, and the CDC may shorten its quarantine guidelines to seven to 10 days, according to a Wall Street Journal report. But the day before the report published, Adalja cautioned that there just isn’t sufficient research yet to suggest how many days after exposure anyone could test out of quarantine. 

“We don’t know how to deploy it best,” he said.

The concerning timing of the season also looms large as the U.S. suffers its third major COVID-19 wave while millions travel for the holiday season. Already, non-conference tournaments planned to provide safer environments for players than their usual locations, but some find themselves in hotspots The Bad Boy Mowers Crossover Classic, for example, is the reinvented “Battle 4 Atlantis” tournament moved to South Dakota that has found itself in a state experiencing some of the nation’s highest positivity rates.

And while some states like South Dakota leave planning games up to tournament organizers and teams, others have imposed strict local guidelines programs must navigate. New Mexico, for example, has such strict guidelines that New Mexico State football shut down for the fall, believing it would be impossible to play. The University of New Mexico football team moved to Las Vegas for the season. And later, New Mexico State men’s basketball headed up to Phoenix.

ncaa-basketball-to-start-nov-25

NCAA to Relocate Men’s March Madness to Single Location

The governing body is in “preliminary talks” with Indiana and Indianapolis to…
November 16, 2020

There’s no end in sight to severely curb the spread with a vaccine before March Madness is set to tip off. While some vulnerable groups might have access to a vaccine in March and April, the general population won’t see a vaccine until “well into 2021,” Adalja said.

Meanwhile, events like a multi-tournament semi-bubble called Bubbleville have attempted to create bubble-like environments so teams can play as many games as possible even in high-risk areas. Bubbleville, for example, requires PCR tests to enter the event, and plans to test players with PCR tests daily despite their being in an isolated environment at Mohegan Sun resort in Uncasville, Conn.

But without a bubble, there’s no guarantee the virus won’t infiltrate a team on campus or when traveling, as has been the case with FBS football. Many college basketball teams can’t get to their bubbles in the first place without having a personnel member test positive: Creighton’s men’s team pulled out of the Crossover Classic after positive tests, for example, and Florida’s men’s team pulled out of Bubbleville for the same reason. And if these teams and others couldn’t get into a bubble, the bubble’s safety precautions are useless.

A disparity in resources around conferences and teams further complicates the season for many, Gould said. Just look at Power 5 conferences: The Pac-12 and Big Ten could afford costly testing partnerships to test athletes daily. The SEC is using the same contact tracing technology as the NFL. 

Meanwhile, the Big East hasn’t announced a conference-wide testing partnership, and the Mountain West and MAC are merely providing three or four tests a week. Events like bubbles are complicated and expensive, Bubbleville organizers told Front Office Sports — though they’re not as expensive as traveling to locations for one-off games and having to split costs of safety precautions with just one other team. 

Among all these factors, the patchwork 2020-21 college basketball season tips off Nov. 25 to attempt to save a financially ailing NCAA and member schools, and give players a chance to play even if they get sick. Pitt men’s basketball coach Jeff Capel recently told reporters: “It’s unlike anything anyone has been through.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Trump Push to End Quarterly Earnings Has Major Sports Ramifications

U.S. President Trump proposes moving to semi-annual reporting for public companies.
exclusive

Field of 68’s Jeff Goodman, Rob Dauster to Lead On3’s College Hoops..

Goodman previously worked for ESPN, CBS Sports, and Stadium.
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 19: A detailed view of the MLB Debut patch on the jersey of Patrick Monteverde #44 of the Miami Marlins prior to game against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on April 19, 2025 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

The Tiny Jersey Patch at the Center of the MLB Rookie Card..

Autographed cards containing a piece of baseball history have upended the market.
Ohio State Buckeyes linebacker Arvell Reese (8) pursues Texas Longhorns quarterback Arch Manning (16) during the NCAA football game at Ohio Stadium on Aug. 30, 2025.

College Football Enters Week 3 Up 21% in TV Ratings

Total college football viewership across all networks is up big.

Featured Today

Eagles-Chiefs Super Bowl Rematch Could Set More NFL Ratings Records

Fox will nationally televise Sunday afternoon’s matchup.
September 10, 2025

ESPN’s ‘MNF’ Ratings Up 8% As NFL Surges to Strong Start

ESPN posts its second-best Week 1 “Monday Night Football” audience.
Sep 7, 2025; Orchard Park, New York, USA; Buffalo Bills fans react during the fourth quarter against the Baltimore Ravens at Highmark Stadium.
September 9, 2025

As Bills Ascend, Their Next Frontier Lies in Canada

Buffalo and the powerful Canadian entity MLSE come together in a new pact.
opinion
September 9, 2025

The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly from NFL’s Week 1 Broadcasts

Many viewers decried the addition of ads to “NFL RedZone.”
Sep 12, 2025; Pasadena, California, USA; New Mexico Lobos quarterback Jack Layne (2) reacts after his team scored a touchdown during the fourth quarter against the UCLA Bruins at Rose Bowl.

UCLA Paid New Mexico $1.2 Million for Friday’s Loss: Payout Game Tracker

The Bruins weren’t the only Power-4 school to lose a buy game and fire their coach.
September 14, 2025

College Football’s Costly Start for Virginia Tech, UCLA: Coaches Out

UCLA and Virginia Tech fire their coaches while Notre Dame slumps badly.
Sep 12, 2025; Pasadena, California, USA; UCLA Bruins quarterback Nico Iamaleava (9) looks to pass during the first quarter against the New Mexico Lobos at Rose Bowl.
September 15, 2025

UCLA-Tennessee QB Trade Has Been Painful So Far

Iamaleava abruptly left Tennessee for UCLA this past offseason.
Sponsored

How World Series Champ Dexter Fowler Became a Premier League Team Owner

Dexter Fowler discusses navigating retirement and embracing new roles as an owner & investor.
Mar 4, 2025; Washington, DC, USA; House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., speaks with Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene, R-Ga., ahead of President Trump’s address to a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on March 4, 2025.
September 11, 2025

House Republicans Delay SCORE Act Vote Tentatively Planned for Next Week

They didn’t believe they had enough votes to pass the bill.
Jan 25, 2023; Langley, British Columbia, CAN; Highlights from the CHL Kubota Top Prospects game at the Langley Events Centre
September 10, 2025

NCAA Hockey Scouts Denied Passes for Crucial Recruiting League

The CHL won’t welcome scouts on passes: “It comes across as petty.”
Feb 17, 2024; Boise, Idaho, USA; Fresno State Bulldogs guard Jalen Weaver (5) during the first half against the Boise State Broncos at ExtraMile Arena.
September 10, 2025

NCAA Bans 3 Basketball Players for Violating Betting Rules Last Season

The former San Jose State and Fresno State players have lost eligibility.
NFL Congress
exclusive
September 10, 2025

College Sports ‘House of Cards’: Republicans, Lobbyists Work to Secure Votes to..

Several House Republicans criticized the SCORE Act on social media.