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New Mexico Basketball Teams Flee To Texas COVID Hotspots

By Dan Rosenzweig-Ziff/The Texas Tribune

Facing restrictive policies prohibiting team sports, the University of New Mexico’s basketball teams have fled their home state, seeking refuge in Lubbock and Amarillo – two of the hardest-hit coronavirus hot spots in Texas.
UNM is relocating both the women’s and men’s teams, hoping to take advantage of laxer COVID-19 restrictions in the Lone Star State.


New Mexico is under a two-week shutdown of nonessential businesses, which started last Monday in an attempt to curb coronavirus spread. Under state guidelines, athletic departments don’t allow games or workouts of more than five people, and anyone who comes from outside the state must quarantine for 14 days. These guidelines led UNM’s football team to relocate to Nevada to practice and host games last month.
In Texas, where total cases exceed 1 million, Gov. Greg Abbott has allowed sporting events to go forward with 50% capacity in the stands, though most major university football programs opted to set their capacities at 25% this fall. Student-athletes and staff have tested positive for the coronavirus throughout the season, requiring several cancellations.
“We’re an open-door community,” Lubbock County Judge Curtis Parrish said about the out-of-state team’s move. “We want people to come in for whatever they need.”
Parrish’s interview with The Texas Tribune came less than an hour after his office announced he tested positive for COVID-19.
UNM’s men’s team will reside in Lubbock temporarily, though the school is still finalizing where the team will practice and play games. Parrish said he has no worries and that he trusts the university to take the necessary health precautions.
At West Texas A&M University, where the UNM women’s team will play, an official said the school is “pleased to host” the Lobos.
“There are no concerns from my perspective. These are private basketball practices being held in a gym with student-athletes who are being tested 3-4 times per week for COVID, have daily symptom checks and basically live in a bubble outside of practice,” said Michael McBroom, the university’s athletic director, in an e-mail. “We will continue to exercise the responsibility and opportunity to serve our students and state as a demonstration of our thoughtful commitment to excellence.”
In Texas’s panhandle, home of West Texas A&M, the hospitalization rate is nearly 40%. Abbott said that hospital regions with more than 15% of capacity serving COVID-19 patients are considered severe enough that bar openings should be banned. In Lubbock, the hospitalization rate is nearly 30%.
Both areas also have some of the highest rates of COVID-19 per 1,000 cases in the state.
Eddie Nuñez, UNM’s athletic director, considered a number of locations and chose West Texas because it was close to Albuquerque. The school’s football team already moved out of the state to Nevada so it could play its games and salvage broadcast contracts.
This post originally appeared in The Texas Tribune.

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Posted on November 22, 2020