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Court stormings come in waves after Caitlin Clark incident. Expert says stiffer penalties are needed

Court stormings come in waves after Caitlin Clark incident. Expert says stiffer penalties are needed
AUTO GROUP. IT’S BECOME FACT AT THIS POINT. ONE DOES NOT SIMPLY WALK INTO HILTON COLISEUM AND EXPECT TO WIN IOWA STATE A PERFCT 12 ZERO AT HILTON THIS YEAR. THE LAST SEVEN RANKED TEAMS TO COME TO AMES HAVE ALL LEFT, LOSING AS KANSAS ROLLS INTO TOWN. THEY WERE LOOKING VULNERABLE. CYCLONES SMELL BLOOD IN THE WATER, A SELLOUT CROWD, A WHITEOUT CROWD. THIS ONE WAS AWESOME. CYCLONES JUMPED OUT EARLY. TREY KING, HE WAS FANTASTIC IN THIS GAME. KNOCKS DOWN A THREE. ONLY HAD THREE THREES COMING INTO THIS GAME. HE WOULD HAVE THREE IN THE FIRST HALF ALONE. HOW ABOUT A LITTLE DEFENSIVE SOUND. WARD. THE SWAT RIGHT THERE. AND THEN MORE DEEP BALL SHOOTING. TAMIN LIPSEY HITS THE THREE CYCLONES OUT OF 3026 LEAD AT THE HALF. SECOND HALF. WATCH THIS SICK DISH LIPSEY THE NO. LOOK TO TREY KING. KING HAD 21 ON THE NIGHT. CYCLONES LED THIS GAME BY DOUBLE DIGITS, BUT KANSAS WOULD STORM BACK SIX POINT GAME KEVIN MCCULLAR JUNIOR TRIMS IT TO THREE. IOWA STATE WOULD BE UP TWO WITH UNDER A MINUTE TO GO, AND KEYSHAWN GILBERT THIS ONE WAS WITH FIVE SECONDS REMAINING ON THE SHOT CLOCK. HAD NO CHOICE. AND THAT’S A MOMENT FANS ARE GOING TO REMEMBER FOR A LONG, LONG TIME. THAT WOULD BE THE DAGGER. CYCLONES TAKE A 7772 LEAD. THEY GO ON TO WIN IT 7975, CYCLONES 13 AND OH AT HOME. WHAT A DAY AT HILTON FANS STORMED THE COURT. SHANNON EHRHARDT WAS IN ALL OF THE ACTION. THERE’S NOTHING QUITE LIKE A COURT STORMING IOWA STATE UPSETS KANSAS RIGHT HERE IN HILTON COLISEUM. HILTON MAGIC STRIKES AGAIN. SHOUT OUT TO THE FANS. I’LL GO FIRST. I’LL DO IT EVERY TIME. I DIDN’T I DIDN’T KNOW THAT. I DIDN’T KNOW THEY WERE STORMING THE COURT. THEY HAVEN’T DONE THAT IN A WHILE. I DON’T THINK SO. I WAS ALREADY IN THE HANDSHAKE LINE AS SOON AS THE BUZZER WENT. OFF. I LOOK UP AND IT’S JUST A CROWD OF PEOPLE AND I’M JUST LIKE, I WAS OVERWHELMED. LIKE I COULDN’T. IT’S TRULY SPECIAL. IT’S THE FIRST TIME I’VE EVER, YOU KNOW, HAD THE OPPORTUNITY TO HAVE THE COURT STORMING IOWA STATE, GAVE FANS A REASON TO ERUPT. ON AVERAGE, THE CYCLONES MAKE JUST SIX THREES A GAME AGAINST KANSAS. THEY DRILLED 14 BIG MAN TREY HAD THE HOT HAND FOR IOWA STATE. HE HIT AN ISU CAREER HIGH FOUR THREES. TALLIED 21 POINTS AND NINE BOARDS. YOU KNOW ONE THING THAT COACH TJ AND COACH CRAWFORD REALLY TALKED TO ME ABOUT WAS, YOU KNOW, IF THEY SAG OFF, IF IT’S THE RIGHT SHOT AND THE RIGHT TIME, TAKE IT AND MAKE IT AND SHOOT IT WITH CONFIDENCE. IT’S THE FIRST TIME IOWA STATE FANS HAVE SEEN TAMIN LIPSEY, KEYSHAWN GILBERT AND CURTIS JONES ALL IN SYNC BEHIND THE ARC. THE TRIO SANK SEVEN, THE MOST CLUTCH COMING WITH 40S LEFT IN THE GAME WHEN IOWA STATE EXTENDED ITS LEAD FROM 2 TO 5. THEY KIND OF GOT A LITTLE DIFFERENT. I REALLY AIN’T HAD NOWHERE TO GO, SO I HIT HIM WITH A LITTLE MOVE AND I JUST SHOT IT AND I WAS LUCKY ENOUGH FOR IT TO GO IN. WELL, THE CHAOS IS CURRENTLY BEING CLEANED UP BEHIND ME AND KANSAS IS SENT PACKING FOR THE THIRD TIME ON THE ROAD. THIS SEASON. IOWA STATE IS NOW TIED FOR SECOND IN THE BIG 12 WITH A FIVE AND TWO RECORD. AND IN CASE YOU FORGOT, THREE POINTERS WILL ALWAYS BE WORTH MORE THAN TWO FROM HILTON COLI
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Court stormings come in waves after Caitlin Clark incident. Expert says stiffer penalties are needed
Images of students pouring out of the stands at the final buzzer to celebrate with players on the home team following a big win have long been part of college basketball. Usually, no one gets hurt.But court storming and the safety risks associated with it have received more scrutiny in the week since Iowa star Caitlin Clark collided with an Ohio State fan after the Buckeyes’ upset of the Hawkeyes in Columbus.There have been at least six more instances since the Clark incident and ESPN analyst Jay Bilas on Saturday called for an end to the tradition. Bilas said during the “College Gameday” show that fans should never be allowed on the court, and his comments went viral.“I know it will keep happening and accept it,” Bilas wrote in a text message to The Associated Press. “But it seems inevitable that something negative will happen, and we’ll act surprised when it was foreseeable.”A Tulane fan was seen on video making contact with a Memphis player during a court storming in New Orleans hours after the Clark incident on Jan. 21. The Southeastern Conference levied a $100,000 fine against South Carolina after fans rushed onto the court following an upset of Kentucky on Tuesday. Fans also stormed the court at Oregon State on Thursday and at Iowa State, Richmond and Wyoming on Saturday.Schools are at risk of being fined by their conferences if the storming occurs before the visiting team and game officials have exited safely. Bilas and other observers call the penalties window dressing and say individuals who participate should face consequences, legal or otherwise.Gil Fried, a business professor at the University of West Florida, provides training in crowd management and for more than 30 years has served as an expert witness in court cases involving injuries sustained at sports and entertainment venues.Fried said ringing the court with security personnel or putting up barricades would be counterproductive because that would jeopardize people in the stands who get caught in the crush of fans pushing forward.The best solution, he said, would be for schools to have a clearly stated policy that fans are not allowed on the court and that those who disobey could have their tickets taken away or be banned from the arena.The challenge would be identifying and rounding up violators. Fried suggested arenas could be equipped with facial recognition technology, which is commonly used in soccer stadiums in Europe and Latin America to prevent hooliganism.State and privacy laws in the United States could present obstacles to using the technology, and no U.S. colleges have shown interest in it for that purpose, said Micah Willbrand, chief product officer and vice president of enterprise identity for NEC, which creates facial recognition systems for soccer stadiums outside the U.S.Cyclones fans celebrate KU upset on the courtThe court storming at Iowa State’s Hilton Coliseum following Saturday’s 79-75 win over No. 7 Kansas was the first in eight seasons. Security personnel in orange vests went onto the court at the final buzzer to separate the players’ handshake line from fans. The Jayhawks, like all visiting teams, then exited on the side of their bench to avoid having to go through fans on the court.Also, gates installed in front of the ISU student section funneled students in one direction instead of there being a mass flow, slowing down the rush.Hoops Hysteria: Rewatch full vlog special highlighting the Iowa State vs. Kansas basketball rivalryMinnesota coach Ben Johnson said nothing good comes from fans mixing with opposing players.“It takes one kid to mouth something or say something that could start something,” Johnson said. “So the physical part of getting hit is one thing, but in the back of my mind it’s also (that) emotions are heightened.”SEC bumps fines up into six-figuresThe SEC this year beefed up its fines for court and field storming to $100,000 for a first offense, $250,000 for a second and $500,000 for a third.SEC spokesman Herb Vincent said there is no fine if the visiting team and game officials have made a safe exit before fans reach the playing surface.SEC fines are paid to the visiting school if the storming occurred in a conference game. For nonconference games, the money is deposited into the league’s postgraduate scholarship fund. The suggestion is that it stings more for the offending school to fork over money to a conference rival.Bilas said it’s apparent fines have had little impact, noting that South Carolina President Emeritus Harris Pastides posted on social media that he was among the fans who rushed the court after the Gamecocks’ win over Kentucky.Bilas said schools use pictures of court storms to promote their programs and in recruiting and noted ESPN and other media companies feature videos of celebrating fans on the court on highlight shows.“The fact that it is banned and SEC school officials accept and encourage it is a contradiction,” Bilas texted to the AP. “I love the passion and enthusiasm, but fans now believe it is their right. It’s not. At an NFL or NBA game, they’d be arrested.”

Images of students pouring out of the stands at the final buzzer to celebrate with players on the home team following a big win have long been part of college basketball. Usually, no one gets hurt.

But court storming and the safety risks associated with it have received more scrutiny in the week since Iowa star Caitlin Clark collided with an Ohio State fan after the Buckeyes’ upset of the Hawkeyes in Columbus.

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There have been at least six more instances since the Clark incident and ESPN analyst Jay Bilas on Saturday called for an end to the tradition. Bilas said during the “College Gameday” show that fans should never be allowed on the court, and his comments went viral.

“I know it will keep happening and accept it,” Bilas wrote in a text message to The Associated Press. “But it seems inevitable that something negative will happen, and we’ll act surprised when it was foreseeable.”

A Tulane fan was seen on video making contact with a Memphis player during a court storming in New Orleans hours after the Clark incident on Jan. 21. The Southeastern Conference levied a $100,000 fine against South Carolina after fans rushed onto the court following an upset of Kentucky on Tuesday. Fans also stormed the court at Oregon State on Thursday and at Iowa State, Richmond and Wyoming on Saturday.

Schools are at risk of being fined by their conferences if the storming occurs before the visiting team and game officials have exited safely. Bilas and other observers call the penalties window dressing and say individuals who participate should face consequences, legal or otherwise.

Gil Fried, a business professor at the University of West Florida, provides training in crowd management and for more than 30 years has served as an expert witness in court cases involving injuries sustained at sports and entertainment venues.

Fried said ringing the court with security personnel or putting up barricades would be counterproductive because that would jeopardize people in the stands who get caught in the crush of fans pushing forward.

The best solution, he said, would be for schools to have a clearly stated policy that fans are not allowed on the court and that those who disobey could have their tickets taken away or be banned from the arena.

The challenge would be identifying and rounding up violators. Fried suggested arenas could be equipped with facial recognition technology, which is commonly used in soccer stadiums in Europe and Latin America to prevent hooliganism.

State and privacy laws in the United States could present obstacles to using the technology, and no U.S. colleges have shown interest in it for that purpose, said Micah Willbrand, chief product officer and vice president of enterprise identity for NEC, which creates facial recognition systems for soccer stadiums outside the U.S.

Iowa State forward Milan Momcilovic celebrates a 79-75 win over Kansas as fans storm the court Saturday, Jan. 27, 2024, in Ames.
AP Photo/Matthew Putney
Iowa State forward Milan Momcilovic celebrates a 79-75 win over Kansas as fans storm the court Saturday, Jan. 27, 2024, in Ames.

Cyclones fans celebrate KU upset on the court

The court storming at Iowa State’s Hilton Coliseum following Saturday’s 79-75 win over No. 7 Kansas was the first in eight seasons. Security personnel in orange vests went onto the court at the final buzzer to separate the players’ handshake line from fans. The Jayhawks, like all visiting teams, then exited on the side of their bench to avoid having to go through fans on the court.

Also, gates installed in front of the ISU student section funneled students in one direction instead of there being a mass flow, slowing down the rush.

Hoops Hysteria: Rewatch full vlog special highlighting the Iowa State vs. Kansas basketball rivalry

Minnesota coach Ben Johnson said nothing good comes from fans mixing with opposing players.

“It takes one kid to mouth something or say something that could start something,” Johnson said. “So the physical part of getting hit is one thing, but in the back of my mind it’s also (that) emotions are heightened.”

SEC bumps fines up into six-figures

The SEC this year beefed up its fines for court and field storming to $100,000 for a first offense, $250,000 for a second and $500,000 for a third.

SEC spokesman Herb Vincent said there is no fine if the visiting team and game officials have made a safe exit before fans reach the playing surface.

SEC fines are paid to the visiting school if the storming occurred in a conference game. For nonconference games, the money is deposited into the league’s postgraduate scholarship fund. The suggestion is that it stings more for the offending school to fork over money to a conference rival.

Bilas said it’s apparent fines have had little impact, noting that South Carolina President Emeritus Harris Pastides posted on social media that he was among the fans who rushed the court after the Gamecocks’ win over Kentucky.

Bilas said schools use pictures of court storms to promote their programs and in recruiting and noted ESPN and other media companies feature videos of celebrating fans on the court on highlight shows.

“The fact that it is banned and SEC school officials accept and encourage it is a contradiction,” Bilas texted to the AP. “I love the passion and enthusiasm, but fans now believe it is their right. It’s not. At an NFL or NBA game, they’d be arrested.”