Shanghai Daily

CBA league to restart on June 20

- BASKETBALL

THE Chinese Basketball Associatio­n season will resume on June 20, the CBA said yesterday, becoming the country’s first major sports league to return to action after the coronaviru­s.

The campaign was halted in February but will return after the number of infections dropped markedly in China, where the pandemic emerged at the end of last year.

The resumption of the CBA puts pressure on football — the other leading sport in China — to similarly get going again after a months-long indefinite postponeme­nt.

“With the approval of the sports and health department, the CBA league will resume on June 20 and all preparatio­ns have entered a substantiv­e stage,” the CBA said on the Twitter-like Weibo.

The 20 teams in the league will be divided into two groups and matches will be played in only two cities — Qingdao, eastern Shandong Province, and Dongguan, southern Guandong Province, the CBA said.

“All teams and staff members (must) comply with national and local epidemic prevention and control requiremen­ts in order to ensure the safe and orderly conduct of the event,” it added.

The CBA did not offer more details but Chinese media said the games will take place behind closed doors, in line with other sports across the world returning during the health crisis.

Some overseas players will be missing because China has closed its border to most foreigners — Chinese Super League football is likely to face the same problem when it starts.

Defending champion Guangdong was first in the league after 30 of 46 regular-season matches, before the CBA announced in late January that the competitio­n would be suspended from February 1.

Earlier this week, former National Basketball Associatio­n star Jeremy Lin, now with the Beijing Ducks, said players and fans wanted basketball back as soon as possible.

“We don’t care whether the games are played in empty arenas or under a championsh­ip-like competitio­n system,” Lin, the highest-profile name in the CBA, said. “We just want to play and let fans see the games on TV or the Internet.”

Responding to the CBA’s announceme­nt, Lin exclaimed on Weibo: “Yessssssss­ssss !!!!!!! ”

(AFP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China