Boston Herald

Celtics await state’s word

With a third of NBA holding workouts, C’s hope to join in

- By Mark Murphy

Monday is the start date for a gradual reopening of Massachuse­tts, and the local profession­al basketball team has not been spared isolation in one of the last states to re-emerge from the coronaviru­s lockdown.

Approximat­ely 10 NBA teams have reopened training facilities — albeit under especially cautious guidelines — but Celtics co-owner Wyc Grousbeck does not sound like a man who believes he’s missing out.

Grousbeck has his checklist from NBA Commission­er Adam Silver, and plans on following every rule.

“We will open our facility for one player, one basket, one coach at a time when we’re improved,” he said of the state’s slowly improving COVID-19 rate.

“We have all of our applicatio­ns and discussion­s underway. We don’t think it will be very long — I will say that,” said Grousbeck. “We’re going to make sure it’s the safest thing anybody does all day long. If we’re open as a state, this might be the safest spot you can possibly be.”

Player safety, of course, will dictate every step taken by the NBA in its search for a way to finish the 2019-20 season. The entire terminolog­y appears to be changing — the so-called “bubble concept,” with Disney World and Las Vegas the two most frequently mentioned sites for a protective playoff environmen­t, appears to have given way to a “campus” concept.

But in the short term, approximat­ely a third of the league, based on state guidelines, is welcoming back players, including Orlando, Cleveland, Utah, Toronto, Portland, Philadelph­ia, Denver and Miami.

Joel Embiid, unsurprisi­ngly, almost immediatel­y posted a photo on Instagram of himself under a basket at the Sixers practice facility. Orlando posted a short video of center Nikola Vucevic shooting at a basket with staff member Lionel Chalmers.

This, too, is how the Celtics will start, with individual players at individual baskets, four at a time. Team coaches are now allowed to work out with individual players, albeit at individual baskets.

Though players have received ongoing treatment from team medical and training personnel at their homes, team training facilities will now be in full swing.

Players can thus begin the long process of working back into shape.

“This is the longest I’ve gone without shooting a basketball in my life,” Heat veteran Udonis Haslem said in a video posted to the Miami site.

“I felt great just getting out there,” he said. “But definitely the legs get tired right now. I had the Billy Madisons at the end of it. I couldn’t do nothing out there at the end.”

But, as Cavaliers forward Kevin Love told ESPN, this slow, gradual pace is all that’s available to players at the moment.

“I feel like anybody who needs an escape or in everyday life is looking for any type of normalcy back doing something they love,” he said. “For me, I played 25-ish years of organized basketball, and this is the longest I’ve ever gone without touching (a basketball). And it’s something I really, really enjoy doing.

“So for me, it definitely was a big dopamine hit, and it just felt great to get in there and sweat outside of doing my workouts at home or getting on a treadmill. Going out there and having some sense of normalcy and getting on the court and actually shooting was pretty uplifting.”

 ?? STuART CAHILL / HERALd STAFF FILE ?? ONE AT A TIME: Celtics co-owner Wyc Grousbeck said the team will begin welcoming back individual players and coaches for workouts once they are allowed to do so.
STuART CAHILL / HERALd STAFF FILE ONE AT A TIME: Celtics co-owner Wyc Grousbeck said the team will begin welcoming back individual players and coaches for workouts once they are allowed to do so.
 ?? AP FILE ?? SLOW REOPENING: NBA Commission­er Adam Silver has about a third of the league’s teams holding workouts at their facilities.
AP FILE SLOW REOPENING: NBA Commission­er Adam Silver has about a third of the league’s teams holding workouts at their facilities.

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