National Post

NBA will return — it’s just a matter of how

- MIKE GANTER

So by now you’ve heard the rumblings from both from the NBA itself and various outlets with a pipeline into the league that the NBA’S grand plan to get going again will almost assuredly happen in a bubble community built within the expanse of World Disney World in Orlando, Fla.

Plenty more has come out since that news was confirmed on the weekend, but very little else is anything more than a guess.

What we know for sure is there is a consensus from the league, the players and ownership that a restart of the season or at the very least a playoff will happen.

The risks have been weighed against the reward and the consensus is whatever the risks, they are worth taking. Commission­er Adam Silver will do his utmost to make things as safe as possible for everyone taking part, but not even the all- powerful Silver can pretend to be 100 per cent certain how this ends up.

He and the league are prepared for the eventualit­y a player or staff member within their bubble tests positive for the COVID-19 virus. That individual would go into immediate quarantine. But there are no guarantees the issue just ends with one. One positive test could lead to countless others.

Again, no one knows for certain but with testing and tracking, the league is hoping to confine any positive test to as few additional positives as possible.

The NBA isn’t the guinea pig here. Leagues in other parts of the world are already underway and by the time the NBA is up and running again — late July seems to be the best guess following a training camp period — there will be that many more, all of which will provide informatio­n and a guideline for how to best to go about this.

The far more interestin­g narrative for fans of the NBA is how the league chooses to restart a league that sits 17 or 18 games shy of finishing its regular season.

Do they jump right into the playoffs with the 16 teams that sat in a playoff position when the season was suspended back on March 11? Or do they try to finish off the season and then go into the playoff round? What about the teams already mathematic­ally eliminated? Do they show up?

On Tuesday, Portland’s Damian Lillard told Yahoo Sports that he would not be a participan­t if his team had no real shot at a playoff spot.

The answer to those questions and any others about the format that a resumed NBA season would take are unknown at his time.

ESPN’S Adrian Wojnarowsk­i, who has had the lead on this from the get-go, says Silver is very much in the discussion phase right now, hearing from owners and players and management alike as he tries to determine the safest, most fair approach possible.

Everything is on the line right now when it comes to the playoff format. The area getting the most discussion isn’t so much about when it begins or what format it takes, but whether the traditiona­l conference brackets would be kept.

Already there have been leaks that the league, with every team in one location, would forego the conference setup and go simply to a 16- team bracket regardless of geographic­al location. It’s not as if travel would be an issue.

In this format, the Toronto Raptors would wind up seeded No. 3 behind the Milwaukee Bucks and Los Angeles Lakers. Toronto’s first round opponent would be the No. 14- seeded Memphis Grizzlies.

Win that round and they would move on to take the winner of the Denver- Indianapol­is matchup and then most likely a matchup with the No. 2 seeded Lakers in the semifinal round, assuming they weren’ t knocked off earlier.

Waiting in the final would be one of the Bucks or Los Angeles Clippers and their lead dog Kawhi Leonard, assuming the tournament’s No. 1 and 4 seeds made it through unscathed.

It would certainly be a new look for the league. And based on a cursory look at social media, it has plenty of backing by the fan base.

But if you’re the Raptors and have fought for a No. 2 seed in the East, do you prefer that playoff route or the traditiona­l format that would see them open up against the Brooklyn Nets followed by series against the winner of Boston/ Philadelph­ia before a likely rematch in the Eastern Conference Final against Giannis Antetokoun­mpo and the Bucks?

Wojnarowsk­i was reporting Tuesday that there seemed to be a leaning toward limiting the number of teams in Orlando to no more than the 16 playoff teams, which makes perfect sense if the ultimate goal remains the safety of the players.

The fewer in the bubble, the fewer that are exposed.

But right now, how the league moves forward is anyone’s guess.

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