Show caption Yeshiva University players, foreground, warm up in a mostly empty Goldfarb Gymnasium at Johns Hopkins University before playing against Worcester Polytechnic Institute in a first-round game in the Division III men’s basketball NCAA tournament. Photograph: Jessie Wardarski/AP College basketball NCAA tournament game in Baltimore held in empty gym for Covid-19 D-III tournament game held in empty gym at John Hopkins

Host school offers refunds to fans who had bought tickets

US infections from Covid-19 increase to over 200 in 18 states Associated Press Fri 6 Mar 2020 17.06 EST Share on Facebook

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In what was believed to be the first US sports event held without fans because of the new coronavirus, a Division III men’s basketball NCAA tournament game was played Friday at an empty gym at Johns Hopkins University.

Yeshiva University tipped off against Worcester Polytechnic Institute just after 2pm in an arena occupied only by players, referees, employees and media members. The national anthem and starting lineups went on as normal with players giving each other fist pounds instead of handshakes.

When the first-round game got underway, players on each team chanted “De-fense!” and cheered to make up for the lack of fans in the 1,100-seat Goldfarb Gymnasium. Yeshiva coach Elliot Steinmetz, who shook WPI coach Chris Bartley’s hand, expected it to be awkward.

“This is definitely the first time we’ve had that situation where there’s no fans in the gym,” Steinmetz said.

As students walked by the athletics facility, there were police officers outside and signs on doors reading, “No spectators”. Music blared over the speakers inside and some pre-planned fan announcements, including one promoting social media sharing – “Tell the world you’re here” – went on with no fans to hear them.

An NCAA Covid-19 advisory panel said Friday, it is “not recommending cancellation or public spacing of athletic and related events scheduled to occur in public spaces across the United States.” Johns Hopkins senior scholar Amesh Adalja is on the panel.

Johns Hopkins University said it was “prudent to hold this tournament without spectators” after Maryland’s recently confirmed Covid-19 cases and CDC guidelines for large gatherings. Maryland announced there were three cases of the virus.

A student at Yeshiva, an Orthodox Jewish university in the Washington Heights neighborhood of New York City, tested positive for the virus.

The game was delayed by more than an hour after a Yeshiva rabbi tested positive and the school needed to provide documentation to ensure it was safe to play. WPI waited at its hotel while that was completed.

Host Johns Hopkins was set to face Penn State Harrisburg on Friday night, with the winners of the two first-round games to play Saturday. The gym was heavily disinfected Thursday night.

Taylor Michel, director of operations of Disinfecting Technologies Group, prepares to disinfect the arena following Yeshiva playing Worcester Polytechnic Institute in the NCAA Division III men’s basketball tournament. Photograph: Patrick Smith/Getty Images

“We did that specific to make sure that there were no questions that we were doing our due diligence, that everything was clean and ready to go,” Johns Hopkins director of athletic communications Ernie Larossa said. “We’re just doing our due diligence to make sure that everybody has a safe environment to compete in.”

Johns Hopkins offered refunds to fans who bought tickets. Larossa said more than 400 tickets had been sold for the two sessions Friday.

Sports events in Italy and Japan have been held without fans in recent weeks, and Meydan Racecourse in Dubai announced it would hold its Super Saturday horse racing this weekend at an empty track. Santa Clara County in California on Thursday recommended the cancellation of large gatherings, including San Jose Sharks hockey games, but the NHL went ahead with the team’s game against Minnesota on Thursday night and the team said weekend games would go on as scheduled.

This game is the second in Baltimore to be held without fans, albeit under different circumstances. A 2015 Major League Baseball game between the Orioles and Chicago White Sox went on at an empty Camden Yards because of civil unrest in the city after the death of Freddie Gray.

Yeshiva’s team had its hotel reservation in suburban Baltimore canceled over coronavirus fears, forcing the team to book rooms at a different place. A PR firm representing the hotel said in a statement sent to the Associated Press “the management of the property followed the precautionary measures set by Yeshiva University, that has recently cancelled classes, as well as scheduled events, through Tuesday, March 10th” and did not discriminate against the team.

The Maccabees, named after the rebel Jewish warriors, are used to legions of faithful fans who sing in Hebrew, chant out their names from the stands and often them follow them on the road. Players on the bench instead chanted “Let’s go, Macs!” while their parents watched back at the hotel.

“We have a huge fan base here in Baltimore that were planning on coming out. We had people from Yeshiva coming out,” said Ofek Reef, who was recently voted rookie of the year in the Skyline Conference for a program-best team that has won 27 games in a row. “It is what is, and we’ll have to push through another phase of adversity.”