Montreal Gazette

NBA players don’t want to hear any talk of asterisks

Clippers coach says title run will require mental toughness amid many unknowns

- BEN GOLLIVER

The Milwaukee Bucks were deep into a joyride season when the novel coronaviru­s intervened to spoil a long list of promising narratives.

Giannis Antetokoun­mpo was tracking toward his second consecutiv­e MVP and was a favourite to win Defensive Player of the Year. The Bucks held the league’s best record and were on pace to claim home-court advantage throughout the playoffs. Their finely-tuned offence was electric, poised to land the franchise’s first NBA Finals berth since 1974. Their defence was suffocatin­g, composed of motivated veterans seeking redemption for a flame-out in the 2019 Eastern Conference Finals.

But play abruptly stopped March 11, leaving Milwaukee and other top contenders like the Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Clippers in limbo. For Antetokoun­mpo, the three-month shutdown has meant more free time with his newborn son, Liam, and an opportunit­y to reflect on and participat­e in the country’s social justice protests.

The time off shattered schedules and routines, even temporaril­y stranding Antetokoun­mpo without court access, and it prompted talk that this year’s champions would face an asterisk due to the unpreceden­ted midseason disruption.

Now, the NBA’S resumption of play at a restricted campus near Orlando later this month has forced another round of adjustment­s.

Antetokoun­mpo must prepare to enter a quarantine­d bubble and spend at least one month away from his son and girlfriend. The Bucks must recapture their exceptiona­l chemistry without home-court advantage and with only a few weeks of team training sessions. And the organizati­on must refocus on its goal of winning the title while living and playing through the threat of a deadly virus.

“This is going to be the toughest championsh­ip you could ever win,” Antetokoun­mpo said Wednesday in Milwaukee, dismissing the asterisk talk. “The circumstan­ces are really, really tough right now. Whoever wants it more will be able to go out there and take it.”

The Bucks are hardly alone in seeking to reframe the adverse circumstan­ces. If outsiders view the coronaviru­s crisis, the schedule shutdown, and the bubble uncertaint­y as reasons to invalidate the upcoming playoffs, the NBA’S top contenders interpret them as additional motivation and, perhaps, a badge of honour.

“(Adam Silver) said the team that wins this will deserve a gold star, not an asterisk,” Los Angeles Clippers coach Doc Rivers said, recalling a conversati­on he had with the NBA commission­er last week. “Whoever comes out of this, it’s going to come down to (mental toughness). There’s going to be so many things that are thrown at us that we don’t even know yet.”

While the Bucks and Clippers expect to have their full rosters available in Orlando, the Lakers will be without guard Avery Bradley, who chose to sit out the resumed season due to family health concerns. The Lakers, who were the West’s top seed before the shutdown, signed guard J.R. Smith, who won a title alongside Lebron James on the Cleveland Cavaliers, to fill Bradley’s spot.

It remains unclear whether centre Dwight Howard, who experience­d a death in the family earlier this summer, will join the Lakers in Orlando, but the franchise remains hopeful and will hold his spot on the roster.

“Our team has been through a lot this year,” Lakers coach Frank Vogel said Wednesday, making a glancing reference to Kobe Bryant’s death in January. “We’ve endured and come out strong each time we’ve faced adversity. If we’re able to come through all of this and achieve the ultimate prize, I do think it deserves a ‘harder than ordinary’ asterisk if you’re going to put an asterisk on it. I don’t think it weakens it at all.”

While the NBA invited 22 teams to Orlando, the Lakers, Bucks and Clippers remain the clear betting favourites to win the 2020 title. James, who is seeking his fourth title, was back at the Lakers’ practice facility Wednesday as Vogel and Lakers president Rob Pelinka looked on from the sidelines, wearing masks.

Antetokoun­mpo, meanwhile, is pursuing the first title of his career, while Clippers star Kawhi Leonard aims to win his third championsh­ip with three different franchises. The Clippers could benefit from the extra rest time, as both Leonard and all-star forward Paul George had their minutes limited this season after dealing with significan­t injuries in recent years.

The Bucks, Lakers and Clippers will travel to Disney World next week. If the bubble holds up and play continues on schedule, contenders will remain in Orlando until a champion is crowned in mid-october.

“I’ll use the Navy SEALS as an example,” Rivers said.

“They get deployed and don’t know the situation, they don’t know when exactly they’re going. But they keep preparing (and they’re ready) when they’re called upon.

“The way I’m looking at it with our players (is very similar to that). I feel like we’re going to be deployed for a mission in Orlando, and we have to have great mental toughness to finish it.”

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