(帶文稿)0406:與往年不一般的大學(xué)校隊(duì)籃球錦標(biāo)賽【文末小測】

2021-04-06 06:30:0006:41 8257
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UCLA celebrates its win over Michigan in the college basketball tournament quarterfinals on March 31, 2021. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)


Transcript

The American college basketball tournaments known as “March Madness” look a little different than they used to. There are very few fans watching the games in person. The players stay in safe areas called “bubbles” in the states of Texas and Indiana.


But at least the games are happening. Last year, the tournaments were just about to start when the United States closed all public events to stop the spread of COVID-19.

The college tournaments include over 60 teams made up of college students. There is a tournament for men and a tournament for women. In U.S. cities with large colleges and universities, people would go out to eat, drink and watch the games on television.

When the tournaments were canceled last year, students were also sent home. Some students have yet to return to campus. Others came back to a very different college life in autumn. They needed to stay apart from each other. They took classes by video call. They could not spend time with friends or eat in large dining rooms. Colleges, like the rest of the country, were trying to stop the spread of the virus that causes COVID-19.

Group activities are a big part of the college experience. And students whose universities had good basketball teams in 2020 lost out on one of those experiences: cheering for their schoolmates in the tournaments.


Shane Hoffmann saw this at the University of Oregon. He is a sports writer for The Daily Emerald, the student newspaper. He said last year, the Oregon women’s basketball team might have won the tournament. Three Oregon players were among the first eight players chosen by the professional teams of the WNBA, including Sabrina Ionescu, the first pick. Hoffmann called it “a huge bummer” to see the college basketball tournaments canceled.

“It did seem very, very gloomy. I think people realized that was the last time they were able to see that phenomenal, phenomenal Oregon team, which is probably going to go down as one of the best ever.”


Oregon's Sabrina Ionescu was the best women's college player last year, but her tournament was canceled due to the global pandemic. (AP Photo/Chris Pietsch, File)


This spring, things are a little less gloomy for Max Witty, a student at Syracuse University in central New York. Witty said watching the games on television was a fun activity for students and others.


“It gives us a sense of maybe we are getting back to normal, maybe one day we can have that big game, maybe one day we’ll be able to sit and watch it with a huge crowd in The Dome, who knows?”

“The Dome” is the large building at Syracuse where 30,000 fans can watch the games and cheer for the team. Watching games there was one of the reasons Witty chose to go to Syracuse.

Syracuse recently lost to the University of Houston to end its season. But for a couple of weeks, Witty said being able to watch the games with a small group of friends was a “pick-me-up” after a difficult year.

Thomas Kollie is in his second year at the University of Alabama. The school, in the city of Tuscaloosa, is known for its winning football team and the 100,000 fans at the games. Kollie said he missed attending football games last year. With COVID-19 restrictions, very few were permitted at the games and he could not get in.


This year, both the men’s and women’s basketball teams were in the college tournaments before losing in late March. Life in Tuscaloosa has also been different compared to 2020. Streets in the city have been filled with fans watching games as the state removed gathering limits.

In his fraternity house, Kollie has been watching sports events with as many as 25 friends.

“Now, like, actually being able to gather and watch the basketball games without fear of how many rules we're breaking, that's really cool. Because you're not sitting in constant fear about the cops coming and kicking everyone out in the middle of a game, or something like that.”

Hoffmann went to Indianapolis, Indiana to write about the Oregon games. He said seeing the whole sports world shut down last year was “depressing.” But now, he is excited to see fans from all over the U.S. coming to see the games.

He said seeing families out in the city, wearing the colors of their favorite teams, made it seem like the U.S. is taking “a step in the right direction to … normalcy again.”

The final games of the college basketball tournaments are played on April 4 and 5.

I’m Dan Friedell.


QUIZ【答案見下方詞匯表后】

How are the US college basketball tournaments different this year?

A. Players are playing in 'bubbles' with few fans watching in person.

B. They are being played rather than being cancelled as in 2020.

C. Most basketball fans are watching the games on television.

D. The games are different in all of these ways from previous years.

What disappointed Shane Hoffman about last year's tournaments?

A. The WNBA chose the best players from the Oregon women's team.

B. An excellent women's team was unable to play in "March Madness."

C. Women's basketball teams did not get as much attention as men's.

D. Students could only watch the basketball tournaments on television.

What does this year's college basketball tournament mean to Max Witty at Syracuse?

A. There are big crowds in town again for the games.

B. It is an opportunity to have large parties again on campus.

C. It is a sign that life is starting to go back to normal.

D. People can once again wear their team's favorite colors.

What does Thomas Kollie say about the situation in Tuscaloosa, Alabama during the college tournaments?

A. Students are being more careful about following the rules.

B. People in Tuscaloosa are fearful of being in large groups.

C The police are breaking up parties because of COVID fears.

D. Restrictions have been lifted for larger gatherings of friends.


Words in This Story


tournament –n. a sports competition or series of contests that involves many players or teams and that usually continues for at least several days

bubble –n. a group created during the pandemic that prevents new people from entering

schoolmate–n. someone who goes to or went to the same school as you

pick–n. someone or something that is chosen

bummer –n. something that is unpleasant or disappointing

gloomy –adj. causing feelings of sadness

phenomenal –adj. very good or great : unusual in a way that is very impressive

sense –n. a particular feeling : an emotion that you are aware of

fraternity –n. an organization of male students at a U.S. college

cool–adj. often used to show approval in a general way

cops –n. police officer

【DBCD】







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