STORRS, Conn. — Precautions were in place Monday at the University of Connecticut designed to prevent a repeat of the violence and vandalism that marred the celebrations of the school’s 2023 NCAA men’s basketball championship.
In advance of the Final Four, the school removed the aluminum light posts along Hillside Road, the main thoroughfare through the center of campus, and replaced them with temporary, recessed lighting.
The school also has limited the size of the campus watch party planned for Monday’s title game against Purdue. Only 6,700 students, all of whom won tickets to the event through a lottery, will be allowed inside Gampel Pavilion for the event, and they all will be seated in the upper bowl of the 10,000-seat arena.
Unlike last year, the general public will not be allowed into the arena and no alcohol will be sold during the event, school spokesman Mike Enright said.
A total of 39 people were arrested after celebrants broke windows, overturned vehicles and even used a light post to ram a door at the student union following the Huskies’ win over San Diego State last April.
Many of those involved in the rioting also faced discipline from the school, which ended up expelling six students, including more than one in their final semester before they would have graduated, Enright said.
Sixteen people were injured, none of them seriously, Enright said.
Two light poles are seen smashed through plate glass windows at the student union, across from Gampel Pavilion, on April 4, 2023, in Storrs, Conn., following UConn’s NCAA college championship basketball game. Precautions were in place at the University of Connecticut Monday, April 8, 2024, designed to prevent a repeat of the violence and vandalism that marred celebrations of the school’s 2023 NCAA men’s basketball championship. Credit: AP/Jim Michaud
“We felt that the large number of people at Gampel last year might have contributed to the actions that followed on campus,” he said. “We’re trying to spread…
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