The Niagara Falls Review

How the Raptors landed in Tampa for next season

- EDUARDO A. ENCINA

TAMPA, FLA. — Roughly three weeks ago, Tampa sports organizers first heard from the Toronto Raptors about temporaril­y relocating the team to the bay area for the beginning of the NBA season.

They entered the conversati­ons with open ears and minds, realizing the delicacy of the situation. The Raptors needed a home, and it seemed an intensifyi­ng second wave of the coronaviru­s pandemic might prevent them from starting their season in Toronto next month.

The Raptors hadn’t played a home game at Scotiabank Arena since Feb. 28, and returning home would help restore asense of normalcy. But Canadian travel restrictio­ns mandate a 14-day quarantine for those entering the country on nonessenti­al business, and with coronaviru­s cases surging on both sides of the border, the Raptors knew their attempt to gain an exemption to play in Toronto was a hard sell.

In Tampa, the Lightning already were in discussion­s to offer Amalie Arena as a potential NHL hub site if the league decided to start its second in a hub setting. Tampa had everything the NHL needed: nearby practice rinks and hotel access to the six to eight teams a hub would draw. The warm Florida winters were an added attraction.

But eventually deadlines would cross. The NHL, aiming for a Jan. 1 start, still had much to do in terms of setting a season format and getting it approved by players and owners. The Raptors, meanwhile, were on a tighter timetable with the regular season beginning Dec. 22 and training camps opening Dec. 1.

Two weeks ago, the Raptors sent a delegation to Tampa to tour facilities, not just Amalie Arena, but also Muma Basketball Center at USF and the AdventHeal­th Center Ice arena in Wesley Chapel as potential practice facility options. Raptors players voted that they preferred Tampa over cities like Buffalo, N.Y.; Fort Lauderdale; Louisville, Ky.; Nashville, Tenn.,; and Newark, N.J.

Still, the Raptors went into this past week holding out hope that they could still call Toronto home. After reviewing the Raptors’ 11th-hour proposal to allow them and traveling NBA teams access into Canada without self-isolating, the Canadian government denied the request early Friday.

The Raptors then put everything quickly into motion, knowing a delay would adversely affect the NBA freeagency period, which began Friday evening. (The Raptors re-signed guard Fred VanVleet to a four-year, $85 million deal Saturday.)

The NHL knew how close the Raptors were to choosing Tampa, and the league was okay with the move despite the fact it eliminated Amalie Arena as a potential hub site.

The Raptors will have access to facilities for as long as they need them, but at least through the first half of the NBA season. Despite the cancellati­on of this season’s NBA All-Star Game, there is a five-day break from March 5-10, and that likely would be the earliest the Raptors would depart for Toronto.

Toronto mayor John Tory, who fired warning shots Friday, saying, “They’re our Raptors and Tampa Bay shouldn’t get any ideas in that regard,” also anticipate­d a potential late winter/spring return to Canada if the pandemic gets under control. Still, the Raptors will have access to Amalie Arena through late July, when the NBA playoffs are scheduled to conclude.

For the Tampa sports scene, which has suffered huge financial losses from the pandemic, the Raptors move represents a best-case scenario, especially for Amalie Arena, which has remained mostly dark since mid-March. Big-ticket concerts showcasing the likes of Elton John, Justin Bieber, Harry Styles and Rod Stewart were either postponed indefinite­ly or reschedule­d for mid-to-late 2021. Now the arena potentiall­y can host limited capacity games with fans in two major sports.

The arena can host both Raptors and Lightning games if the league decides to play in home arenas.

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