Lodi News-Sentinel

NBA players, coaches feel they can finish season

- By Dan Woike

It’s a nightmare scenario for a team in the NBA’s Disney World bubble. A group of players intermingl­ing, competing together, living together, and now, suffering from the coronaviru­s together.

As Major League Baseball deals with this very thing — albeit in a fair less controlled situation — the NBA and its principals had to spend some time Monday thinking “What if ?” But like most nightmares, people believe this one won’t come true; not in their league, not with their plan.

“What we’re doing and what they’re doing is so different,” Los Angeles Clippers coach Doc Rivers said. “I like what we’re doing.”

The NBA, its coaches and its players remain confident in the league’s plan to finish its season, even as the real world keeps offering reminders of how scary the coronaviru­s can be. As the Miami Marlins have seen their roster ravaged with positive tests, the NBA continues to push toward its reopening night on Thursday.

The reason? The NBA isn’t in the real world. The league is paying more than $150 million to create its own. It’s why the actions of Lou Williams, Dwight Howard and Richaun Holmes all demanded serious responses after they flouted safety protocols.

After the Clippers’ loss to Sacramento in their final scrimmage Monday, Rivers said he wasn’t sure the 10-day quarantine Williams is undergoing is “fair.” But science points to it being necessary.

It takes up to two weeks for symptoms to develop after exposure to the virus, so the NBA couldn’t let a player back in faster than that, even with daily testing. Because one incorrect test (or one interactio­n in the window between a negative and positive test) and the entire NBA plan could crash. One interactio­n with a mask off or one unauthoriz­ed interactio­n with a delivery person, and an NBA team could find itself in the same position as the Marlins.

“What we’re doing is working,” Washington Wizards coach Scott Brooks said. “... We can’t relax. We can’t let our guard down because you have to do it every day. You can’t have an off day. I’ve not seen anybody without mask, without social distancing with nonmembers of your team. I’m hoping, knock on wood, this continues — because we

need this.”

For someone like Williams, who left the bubble to attend a funeral (and hit an Atlanta strip club for some chicken wings), he was kept isolated from Clippers teammates and staff upon returning. He’ll be tested daily while in quarantine, including, according to league protocols, the deep nasal swab that so many want to avoid, before clearing. He’ll also forfeit pay for games he misses.

Those protocols would be impossible to institute on players living outside the bubble, the ones who go home to their families and out to dinner while on road trips.

The NBA’s plan isn’t without sacrifice. Players have left families, pregnant wives and young mothers at home. Life events, such as weddings, have had to be skipped. The prospect of needing to go back into a bubble for next season is too big of a commitment to even consider with so much scheduled between now and the NBA Finals in October. All the NBA has is its plan and people’s belief in it.

For now, that seems good enough to keep moving forward.

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