Regina Leader-Post

Barkley says it’s ‘stupid to not play’

- DES BIELER

The NBA is planning on returning to action next month despite the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, but some notable players are opposed to the idea. In turn, Charles Barkley is very much opposed to those players’ hesitance about resuming the 2019-20 season.

“I think it would be stupid to not play,” Barkley said Monday on ESPN.

The TNT analyst and Hall of Famer was asked for his thoughts on recent comments by the Brooklyn Nets’ Kyrie Irving and the Los Angeles Lakers’ Dwight Howard. Irving and Howard assert that rather than playing, it’s more important to take advantage of a moment when major positive change for black people appears attainable.

“I have no idea what Kyrie or Dwight are talking about, but it’d be a catastroph­ic mistake not to play,” Barkley said.

Citing “two reasons” he thought it would be a grave error to halt the NBA’S progress toward a resumption, Barkley said, “No. 1, if they don’t play, they’re going to be out of sight, out of mind for the rest of the year. There won’t be any cameras following.

“Lebron (James of the Los Angeles Lakers) is probably the most famous athlete in the United States. He won’t be visible anywhere,” Barkley continued. “So, out of sight, out of mind. Also, these guys have got to realize this money ain’t gonna come back, and they’re gonna lose billions of dollars that the players can use to go into their own communitie­s and do some great stuff.”

Describing a possible return to play as a “distractio­n” that “isn’t needed at this moment,” Howard had said Saturday in a statement, “Sure it might not distract us the players, but we have resources at hand (the) majority of our community don’t have.”

“I would love nothing more than to win my very first NBA Championsh­ip,” added Howard, a 34-yearold in his 16th profession­al season. “But the unity of My People would be an even bigger Championsh­ip, that’s just (too) beautiful to pass up ... No Basketball till we get things resolved.”

Irving, a ninth-year veteran who is one of six elected vice presidents of the National Basketball Players Associatio­n, was reported to have been a strong voice against the plan to resume the season in a call Friday with more than 80 NBA and WNBA players.

“I don’t support going into Orlando,” Irving said on the call, reported The Athletic, referring to the Disney-owned site where the league is planning to stage the rest of its season in a protective bubble of sorts. “I’m not with the systematic racism and the bulls--... Something smells a little fishy. Whether we want to admit it or not, we are targeted as black men every day we wake up.”

Other players have raised concerns about health, both in terms of the coronaviru­s and a possibly increased chance of major injury after a months-long layoff. Carmelo Anthony of the Portland Trail Blazers recently said of the plan that “it’s hard to commit to it 100 per cent” until all the details are hammered out and disseminat­ed.

ESPN reported Monday that an informal coalition of NBA players, including Irving and the Lakers’ Avery Bradley was forming to express reservatio­ns that some might not want to share individual­ly for fear of retributio­n.

“James, a four-time NBA MVP and the league’s most influentia­l player, is thought to be in favour of a return to play.

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Charles Barkley

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