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NCAA granting extra year of eligibility due to sports’ suspensions

Senior NCAA athletes who have had their spring sports such as baseball, softball, track and others will have that year of eligibility restored, according to multiple reports.

The NCAA hasn’t answered the question about scholarship limitations as many sports have already signed 2021 classes and scholarships have been formally offered.

It is likely the NCAA will have to expand the number of scholarships, at least on a temporary basis, depending on the number of seniors wishing to stay on scholarship balanced with the number of freshmen entering.

There has been no word on how winter athletes’ eligibility will be handled, but the guess is there will be no changes there as the regular seasons had come to an end in basketball.

Life is going to be strange now with world of sports shut down

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The week of the 9/11 terror attacks, I found myself in Morrilton as Stuttgart was playing a non-conference prep football game against the Devil Dogs.

With my newlywed wife, Sheena, in tow I covered an entertaining game from the press box for the Pine Bluff Commercial.

While Arkansas high school football is great, this game stood out from many others I’ve covered. After a week of turmoil that saw our nation attacked, taking in the pageantry of a good, high school football game was soothing to the soul.

I felt it, Sheena felt it and all of the Devil Dogs and Ricebirds fans in the packed stands felt it as well.

Later, when the NFL and college football seasons and Major League Baseball playoffs resumed, those events bound us together as Americans. The World Series and football was a great distraction.

Who could forget George W. Bush throwing a perfect strike on a ceremonial first pitch at Yankee Stadium?

Sports is a release, and we needed it. It helped many through a difficult time.

Nineteen years later, we are going through another crisis, but this time sports won’t be a comfort. With the threat of the COVID-19 virus spreading across the United States, college and professional sports began making adjustments.

Those moves came to a head Thursday when the NCAA announced the cancellation of the men’s and women’s basketball tournaments and all spring sports regular-season and championship events, including the College World Series.

The NBA suspended its season with a handful of players already testing positive. The NHL has gone that way as well and Major League baseball halted spring training and will delay the start to its season.

So, one of the busiest, fun times of the year is now dead.  Done. I can’t hardly believe this as I type it.

There will be no March Madness or brackets. We won’t get to see how first-year Arkansas coach Eric Musselman’s Hogs would do in the SEC Tournament and if they could make a miraculous run and go the NCAA Tournament or play in the NIT.

We won’t get to see if Arkansas baseball could snap out of its doldrums and earn another Omaha trip.

The Arkansas High School Basketball State Championships will be halted after Thursday night and other high school sports and minor league baseball teams in the state will be impacted, too.

I’ve been on this planet 45 years and have seen nothing like this. There have been health scares, including the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s and other viruses, but nothing that completely stopped the most powerful forces in sports.

I mean really, our country was under attack, and we picked right up and played ball … almost without hesitation and now the NCAA Tournament won’t be played for the first time since its inception in 1939.

As I sat at home Thursday watching my friend and former Hog Pat Bradley break news of the SEC canceling its events on the SEC Network, my thoughts turned to a life with no sports.

It made me shudder.

Like many of you, I’ve spent much of my life playing and watching sports, monitoring it daily. It’s a huge part of my life. Some would say maybe too much, but it has and always will be my favorite form of entertainment.

My boys J.D, 11, and Luke, 8, are just like their dad. They follow their favorite teams and JD even likes the XFL and watches it each weekend. I was looking forward to taking them to see Arkansas baseball play Alabama next Friday night.

They were on campus a few weeks ago and were able to meet slugger Heston Kjerstad and other Hogs athletes, and they couldn’t wait to go back.

J.D.’s traveling soccer season is suspended at least until the end of March and as I wrote this Luke’s travel baseball season has been delayed as well. We spend at least five days a week juggling those activities.

It is great fun for me attending the practices and hanging out with them.

Sheena pitches in on practice duty, and we all attend the games together. Everything in our daily routine has been snatched away. I know you are reading this and feeling the same way. It is an empty, empty feeling.

From a Hogs perspective, we know the baseball season is over, now you have to wonder if spring football will be allowed to continue and hope that the summer heat zaps the bug, and that football season won’t be affected and maybe things will return to normal.

Some national media types are speculating that football season is in jeopardy. NO!

Maybe spring football will be allowed to continue.

It was already going to be anticipated since its first-year coach Sam Pittman’s inaugural season, but with nothing else to capture the attention of Hogs fans, the practices and spring game would be under way more scrutiny. (I know it would be focus of my columns for at least five or six weeks.)

I know sports is the least of our concerns right now as COVID-19 ramps up in our state. JD and Luke’s school in Bryant has been closed for the month and others around the Little Rock metro have as well.

More schools and events will be canceled as more cases are reported and unfortunately there will be.

And unfortunately, we won’t have sports to comfort us as we brace for the worst.

Here’s to hunkering down and spending time with family praying this pandemic won’t be severe or long and that the effects to our overall health and economy will be minimal.

Then we will be back to enjoying sports and the most pressing issue we have to debate is who the Arkansas starting quarterback will be and how many wins the Hogs will have in 2020.

SEC commissioner with update after cancelling men’s tournament, all sports

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey had another press conference Thursday after the decision was made to cancel the SEC Tournament and all competition for the league through March 30.

No more games, no more sports as SEC, others suspend seasons

The SEC has cancelled the basketball tournament in Nashville and just about every pro sports operation has suspended operations.

Yes, that includes Arkansas’ second-round matchup with South Carolina scheduled for Thursday night, baseball through March 30.

That probably includes spring football practice, too, which may not even happen this year with the coronavirus pandemic uncertainty.

As of this writing, the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships are still set to be held in Albuquerque.

With the Razorbacks’ 86-73 win over Vanderbilt on Wednesday night (that may go down in the history books as the last league game of this season), Eric Musselman got 20 wins in his first season.

Even the most optimistic basketball folks I knew weren’t predicting that. It was a season where they over-achieved.

“There will be a lot of frustration for our fans,” SEC boss Greg Sankey said in a press conference Thursday afternoon. “This was the appropriate decision.”

Here’s the major points:

• Cancellation of SEC basketball tournament.
• All sports competition suspended through March 30.
• Gymnastics championships are cancelled.

Sankey admitted he didn’t have answers to all the questions right now.

“It may not be March 30,” Sankey said about resuming games. “It may be further.”

With Duke and Kansas announcing Thursday just after noon they will not be playing in the NCAA Tournament if it is held, you can probably assume others will follow their lead and there may not be any March Madness this year.

The biggest question for many fans is the status of spring football, which was scheduled to start Monday for the Hogs in Sam Pittman’s first official practices. Other SEC schools are smack in the middle of workouts.

“I don’t have a prescriptive list of what’s going to happen with spring football,” Sankey said.

All in-person recruiting has been suspended, which will primarily be of interest in football as this is one of the heavier periods for that.

We will update as more information becomes available.

Stackhouse and Commodores’ players recapping loss to Razorbacks at SEC tourney

Vanderbilt coach Jerry Stackhouse and players talking about 86-73 loss in first round of SEC Tournament on Wednesday night.

Musselman, Joe, Jones after Hogs advance at SEC Tournament on Wednesday

Arkansas coach Eric Musselman along with Isaiah Joe and Mason Jones with the media after downing Vanderbilt, 86-73, in the first round of the SEC Tournament in Nashville on Wednesday.

Hogs to restrict attendance until at least March 30 for home events

FAYETTEVILLE — The University of Arkansas will host home athletic competitions with restricted attendance from now until at least Monday, March 30.

This is as a precautionary measure with the worldwide concern over the China Coronavirus, which has affected multiple sports across the world. The NBA suspended the season on Wednesday evening.

Similar restrictions were announced for the 2020 SEC Men’s Basketball Tournament, other SEC Championship events and all on-campus regular season games hosted by an SEC institution through March 30.

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey held a press conference in Nashville during the men’s basketball tournament addressing the situation Wednesday.

Only essential team personnel, limited family members and credentialed media members will be permitted into all scheduled athletic home events at the University of Arkansas and all other SEC campuses beginning Thursday.

“Our first priority is the health and safety of our student-athletes, coaches, staff as well as the well-being of our loyal fans who support them,” Arkansas athletics director Hunter Yurachek said in a press release.

The following Razorback home events will be impacted this weekend:

Friday, March 13
Women’s Tennis vs. Vanderbilt
Gymnastics vs. Penn State
Softball vs. Georgia (SECN+)

Saturday, March 14
Soccer vs. Nebraska
Softball vs. Georgia (SECN)

Sunday, March 15
Women’s Tennis vs. Kentucky
Softball vs. Georgia (SECN)

Information from Razorback Sports Communications is included in this story.