Dayton Daily News

League to players: Avoid high-fives amid virus fears

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The NBA has told players to avoid high-fiving fans and strangers and avoid taking any item for autographs, the league’s latest response in its ongoing monitoring of the coronaviru­s crisis that has spread to most corners of the planet.

The league, in a memo sent to teams Sunday and obtained Monday by The Associated Press, offered 10 recommenda­tions to players with hopes of decreasing risks of getting the virus — among them, not taking items such as pens, markers, balls and jerseys from autograph seekers.

The NBA also told teams that it is consulting “with infectious disease experts, including the Centers for Disease Control” and infectious disease researcher­s at Columbia University in New York.

“We are also in regular communicat­ion with each other, NBA teams including team physicians and athletic trainers, other profession­al sports leagues, and of course, many of you,” the league wrote in its memo to teams, their physicians and athletic training staffs. ESPN first reported on the contents of the memo.

Some players are already heeding the advice.

“Corona,“Bobby Portis of the New York Knicks said as he offered some fist-bump greetings on Monday night before his team faced the Houston Rockets.

Jimmy Butler of the Miami Heat said he wasn’t necessaril­y worried or thinking about avoiding high-fives.

“I don’t think about any of that,“Butler said. “I’m still going to be who I am. We’re still going to be who we are.“

Portland guard CJ McCollum said in a tweet on Saturday that he is taking the matter seriously, saying he is “officially taking a break from signing autographs until further notice.”

“You just have to be careful,” McCollum said Monday night in Orlando. “Obviously it’s affecting people, especially people who are displaying weaker immune systems and people over 60. You’ve got to check yourself and wash your hands, try to reduce contact with outsiders and outside germs.“

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