SAN ANTONIO
— Over the past few days in San Antonio, it would not have been unusual to see
a women’s basketball team walking from its hotel to the coronavirus testing
facility at a nearby convention center.
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It would be
the biggest pack of pedestrians wearing basketball merchandise in town at the
outset of the 2021 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) women’s
tournament.
San Antonio
is not sleepy. Residents and tourists are here for the nightlife, food and warm
weather, and there’s a 50-50 chance that they have masks on outside despite the
local recommendation that people wear them on county property.
But here for
basketball? No — not yet, anyway.
“Some people
have asked where we’re from, what game we’re playing, and know that the
tournament is here,” Skyler Curran, a junior guard for High Point University,
said in an interview after her virus test Sunday.
The first
games of the 2021 women’s basketball tournament tipped off Sunday, days after
images and statements regarding inequities between the men’s and women’s
tournaments circulated on social media, highlighted by differences in workout
facilities, meals and virus tests.
“We all went
through the same stuff this year, we all took the same precautions,” Curran
said. “We all work for the same thing every year — and for us, especially, our
first time being here, and we were excited for the experience — and for us to
get here and to see our facilities and their facilities be better essentially
because they are men, that was super frustrating.”
At the men’s
tournament in Indiana, players and staff are tested in their hotels daily, no
travel necessary, according to David Worlock, an NCAA spokesperson. All of
those tests are polymerase chain reaction tests, which are more sensitive and
less likely to produce false negatives than rapid antigen tests, which women’s
teams are mainly receiving.
“With the
obvious disparity between the women’s and men’s tournaments, the message that
is being sent to our female athletes, and women across the world, is that you
are not valued at the same level as your male counterparts,” Stanford coach
Tara VanDerveer wrote in a statement posted to Twitter on Saturday.
Mark Emmert,
the NCAA president, apologized for the training room setup in an interview with
The New York Times and other organizations Friday, calling the situation “deeply
disappointing.”
But the
differences between the two tournaments extend beyond the facilities and
testing. Fans are not permitted to attend games in San Antonio and nearby
cities until the round of 16, Lynn Holzman, the NCAA’s vice president for women’s
basketball, said in an interview Thursday. The men’s tournament in Indiana has
allowed a limited number of in-person spectators from the start.
For now at
women’s games, six members per individual in a team’s travel party can enter
the stadium. All games starting with the round of 16 will be played in the
Alamodome, which is bisected by a curtain to designate two courts and will
allow up to 17 percent capacity including staff, teams and fans.
Precautions,
taken in congruence with local health authorities to limit contact and spread
of the virus within the so-called controlled environment, prevent those who are
not among the members of athletic programs or officials who would come in
contact with them from entering places used by the NCAA, including food
delivery servers and even lower-level credentialed officials.
Coronavirus
cases have been trending downward for several weeks in the San Antonio area,
according to Anita Kurian, the assistant director of the city’s public health
department. There have been fewer than 300 new cases on average per day in
Bexar County, Texas, in the past week, according to a New York Times database.
Players and
staff will stay in their individual rooms for the length of the tournament,
meeting virtually unless they are headed to the convention center for daily
antigen testing, practices or meeting room gatherings. Two of the hotels
housing teams — a Holiday Inn near the River Walk and the St. Anthony — take
teams everywhere on buses with police motorcades, regardless of distance,
according to Paul Jacobs, a travel agency employee working the tournament. All
remaining teams will move to a centralized hotel across from the convention
center for the round of 16.
Meals,
provided by the NCAA or bought by the programs themselves, are taken alone in
rooms, unless coordinated in a team’s meeting room or grabbed in the morning at
the convention center. Teams have some autonomy over how they want to meet.
Some cope
with the isolation better than others. Curran and her teammates, thankful to be
in the tournament, play cards online, do school work or otherwise relax when
they are not together.
“The new
Justin Bieber album came out this weekend, so I have been listening to a lot of
that,” Curran said.