Current:Home > ScamsCourt storm coming? LSU preparing for all scenarios as Tigers host No. 1 South Carolina-DB Wealth Institute B2 Expert Reviews
Court storm coming? LSU preparing for all scenarios as Tigers host No. 1 South Carolina
View Date:2025-01-11 13:13:48
A court-storming incident last weekend involving Iowa’s Caitlin Clark − where the star guard was accidentally knocked over by an Ohio State fan sprinting to join the celebration after the No. 15 Buckeyes upset the No. 2 Hawkeyes − has sparked an interesting discussion.
Given the growing parity and interest in women’s college basketball and how common upsets are becoming, should extra security at games be considered?
Clark's collision with a fan comes less than 10 months after more than 10 million people tuned into the title match between LSU and Iowa last April. Places that already drew well, including South Carolina and Iowa, have seen a significant increase in attendance this season. LSU sold just south of 10,000 season tickets for 2023-24, almost doubling last season’s sales. Clark and her pursuit of the scoring record are responsible for selling out each of Iowa’s remaining road games. Attendance for the Ohio State-Iowa game was nearly three times what the Buckeyes typically draw and was their largest women's basketball crowd ever.
Clark said she was OK after being taken out, but both she and Iowa coach Lisa Bluder expressed disappointment that Ohio State didn’t have a plan in place to help players safely exit the floor. (Buckeyes coach Kevin McGuff and athletic director Gene Smith apologized immediately after the collision.) The Big Ten told the Associated Press it would not fine Ohio State for the incident.
Thursday, No. 9 LSU hosts No. 1 South Carolina in a game expected to draw a sellout crown of more than 13,000 at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center. Secondary market tickets close to the court are listed for upwards of $1,000 and have been priced as high as $4,000. College GameDay will be on site for its pregame show. Kim Mulkey, coach of the defending national champion Tigers, said she expects “one heck of an atmosphere.” But she didn’t express concern about a potential postgame celebration getting out of hand.
“It wouldn’t matter,” she said of having extra security. “How much security do you have at a football game? It wouldn’t matter. How much security do you have at a football game and you can’t hold them back, right? One guy is going to hold back how many students? You can line (security) up like a bunch of soldiers, and at the end of the day, you’re outnumbered.”
LSU will have 'heightened sense of awareness' as it hosts No. 1 South Carolina
Still, LSU is preparing for all possible scenarios should the Tigers hand South Carolina its first loss of the season.
"We do have a court-storming protocol that allows us to deploy security as needed to prevent fan access to the competition area," said Cody Worsham, LSU's chief brand officer. "For bigger games, we certainly have a heightened sense of awareness on these matters."
In women’s basketball, court-storming is a relatively new and rare phenomenon. Even when the top-ranked team in the country has been upset − as No. 1 South Carolina was in March 2022 when it lost to unranked Kentucky in the SEC tournament championship game − no fans rushed the floor. Ditto for when Sabrina Ionescu’s No. 2 Oregon squad was surprised on the road at No. 12 Oregon State in 2019, even though a capacity crowd of 9,301 watched the game.
Most women’s teams do not travel with security, either, though there are exceptions. That’s the case with defending champion LSU, which boasts superstar NIL athletes like Angel Reese and Flau’jae Johnson, who is also a rapper. But for the Tigers, it’s more about being able to get from the bus to the arena than protecting athletes during a rowdy on-court celebration. (Across the SEC, visiting women’s basketball teams are assigned a police officer who stays with the team or head coach the entire time they’re in the building.)
LSU could be hit in pocketbook if takes down No. 1
LSU stands to face monetary punishment should fans rush the court Thursday. The league mandates a $100,000 fine if spectators leave the stands, and that's for the first infraction. The penalties increase to $250,00 and $500,000 for a second and third violation.
Should there be a court storming, the scene won't be unfamiliar to South Carolina. The school was hit with a $100,000 fine Wednesday, one day after fans joined the on-court celebration following its men's team posting an upset of No. 6 Kentucky with women's coach Dawn Staley in attendance.
Staley didn't take part in the festivities, choosing to enjoy the scene from afar.
"It looked a little too dangerous for me," Staley said Wednesday. "That's a young person's thing. I was thinking 'I want to' but my body said 'girl, please.'
"I didn't incite anything, but I didn't mind seeing the students cheer for our men's basketball team in the way that they did because it doesn't happen often and we got to really, really celebrate it because we want more."
Court-storming unlikely, nearly impossible, at NCAA events
Even the biggest upset of all time in women’s basketball − fourth-seeded Louisville’s 82-81 win over defending champion Baylor in the 2013 Sweet 16 − didn’t result in anyone rushing the court. But that’s probably because the NCAA was running it.
According to Meghan Wright, a spokeswoman for the NCAA, schools hosting NCAA championship events are “expected to have security plans in place,” she told USA TODAY Sports via email. While the NCAA does not have a written court-storming best practices document, the governing body of college sports does provide experts if schools need assistance.
At neutral sites − like the Final Four − the NCAA works with host venue security and local law enforcement to make a postgame plan. It helps, of course, that at neutral site events, there’s a mix of fan bases. Usually in court-storming, the arena is packed with just one passionate fan base.
Mulkey said Wednesday she’d love for fans to be able to storm the court after a national championship win. And while she acknowledged that she’s doesn’t always know "how good or bad our fans are, I know they love us," she expects them, like everyone else, to follow the rules and stay off the floor, no matter the outcome.
Follow Lindsay Schnell on social media: @Lindsay_Schnell
veryGood! (42)
Related
- ‘I got my life back.’ Veterans with PTSD making progress thanks to service dog program
- NTSB at scene of deadly Ohio interstate crash involving busload of high school students
- Jason Mraz calls coming out a 'divorce' from his former self: 'You carry a lot of shame'
- John Legend Reveals How Kids Luna and Miles Are Adjusting to Life as Big Siblings to Esti and Wren
- Contained, extinguished and mopping up: Here’s what some common wildfire terms mean
- US producer prices slide 0.5% in October, biggest drop since 2020
- Many parents don’t know when kids are behind in school. Are report cards telling enough?
- Landlord arrested after 3 people found stabbed to death in New York City home
- Jeep slashes 2025 Grand Cherokee prices
- A day after Britain’s prime minister fired her, Suella Braverman accuses him of being a weak leader
Ranking
- Wendi McLendon-Covey talks NBC sitcom 'St. Denis Medical' and hospital humor
- Colorado mass shooting suspect, who unleashed bullets in supermarket, pleads not guilty
- German publisher to stop selling Putin books by reporter who allegedly accepted money from Russians
- ASEAN defense chiefs call for the fighting in Gaza to cease, but they struggle to address Myanmar
- Black and Latino families displaced from Palm Springs neighborhood reach $27M tentative settlement
- Enrollment rebounds in 2023 after 2-year dip at Georgia public universities and colleges
- Should Medicaid pay to help someone find a home? California is trying it
- 8 teenagers arrested on murder charges after Las Vegas boy, 17, beaten by mob
Recommendation
-
Just Eat Takeaway sells Grubhub for $650 million, just 3 years after buying the app for $7.3 billion
-
Minibus taxi crashes head on with truck in Zimbabwe, leaving 22 dead
-
Biden, Xi meeting is aimed at getting relationship back on better footing, but tough issues loom
-
Wisconsin Republicans pass $2B tax cut heading for a veto by Gov. Tony Evers
-
Democrat Janelle Bynum flips Oregon’s 5th District, will be state’s first Black member of Congress
-
The Excerpt: Many Americans don't have access to safe drinking water. How do we fix that?
-
Germany’s highest court annuls a decision to repurpose COVID relief funding for climate measures
-
Fatalities from Maui wildfire reach 100 after death of woman, 78, injured in the disaster