On Monday morning, as is customary, representatives from the 16 teams participating in the DI Men’s Lacrosse Tournament joined a conference call with the NCAA to go over the details in preparation of this weekend’s games.
It was then, more than a dozen sources tell IL, that they learned for the first time that the maximum bench size allowance was reduced from 52 to 45.
“It was just a bummer,” Duke coach John Danowski said this week. “It’s the time of year you’re supposed to be the most keyed up, and it just took the wind out of our sails a little bit.”
What exactly is the issue?
Well, for years, the NCAA has mandated that the official travel party size for Men’s Division I Lacrosse is 40, and that 32 players are eligible to play in the game. However, beyond that 40 players who are allowed to dress, coaches say that they’ve been able to have the remainder of their roster travel with the team, stay in the hotel and be present on the sideline without issue.
NCAA managing director of championships and alliances Anthony Holman says that the number of individuals allowed to access the bench area was reduced to mitigate risk of the spread of COVID-19.
“For the 2020-21 academic year as part of the COVID-19 protocols, the Tested Travel Party size was established and that number for Division I Men’s Lacrosse is 45,” he wrote in an email to IL. “The maximum bench size allowance was reduced from 52 to 45 to match the tested travel party size. That modification was done consistent with guidance and recommendations from the NCAA Medical Advisory Group in the effort to mitigate risk of contraction and spread of the COVID-19 virus. Having the number of the tested travel party be consistent with the number of individuals allowed in team areas and within the CTZ (COVID-19 Tested Zone) as well as being able to appropriately manage the numbers in the tested community was essential in the planning and execution of NCAA Championships.”
To the extent that the reduced bench size allowanced could be a cost-saving measure, Holman wrote: “[Th 40-player travel party] has long been established as the appropriate number for Men’s Lacrosse and the number of individuals that institutions are eligible to have travel expenses covered and per diem allowance reimbursement from the NCAA.”
As a result, coaches have to choose which players aren’t able to make the trip and stand on the bench with their teammates, an issue that affects more players this spring than in a normal year because of the increased roster sizes resulting from the NCAA’s awarding an additional year of eligibility to spring athletes last year.
Among others, parents are upset, and it’s led to an outcry,
as evidenced by this Change.Org petition that had more than 1500 signatures on Thursday a.m.
“This petition is to express to the NCAA how disappointed the lacrosse community is about limiting the rosters of the teams who are invited to play in the tournament,” the description of the petition reads. “Every college athlete has sacrificed this year with additional Covid requirements being added to the already rigid University rules. Our athletes have been training and living together since August. It is a shame to send only a small roster to the tournament games.”
The reduced bench size allowance creates difficult choices not just with players, but with support staff. Most teams in the NCAA Tournament travel a staff that includes:
- A head coach
- Two full-time assistants
- A volunteer assistant
- A directer of operations
- A trainer
- A team doctor
- An equipment manager
- Two or three team managers (usually students that often handle tasks like video coordination)
- A sports information director
- A videographer/social media coordinator
- a sport administrator
That theoretical 13-person party counts against the 45-man limit. As an example of the result, Danowski says that his bench will include himself, assistants Ron Caputo and Matt Danowski, volunteer Ned Crotty, one athletic trainer and 40 players. The doctor and equipment manager will be in the stands; any equipment issues will be passed from the field to the stands and back.
For the players who won’t be allowed on the sideline, they’ll have to drive from Durham to Dorrance Field and enter with a ticket and sit in the stands. For Denver, with a roster of 68, the players not on the bench will be in a field-level suite on the far side of the field from the benches. For the players on Notre Dame’s, Loyola’s and Drexel’s roster — where the trip isn’t a six- or seven-hour drive, they’ll likely have to be left behind. That’s despite one of those teams (at least) flying to Denver on a chartered 737 that will be less than 30% filled.
https://www.insidelacrosse.com/arti...sparking-tough-conversations-fan-outcry/57899