Los Angeles Times

AVOIDING ROAD HAZARDS

As Clippers and others navigate trips this season, local variances in protocols follow

- By Andrew Greif

For as long as NBA trips have existed, its markets have been ranked by the hundreds who regularly travel its 28- city circuit by any number of preference­s, from nightlife and dining options to the distance between the airport and the arena.

As teams began to navigate travel amid a pandemic this season, some have been looking at the map through a different lens: Where will teams feel the most normal?

By leaving behind the single- location “bubble” where the NBA staged the f inal three months of last season in favor of playing in home markets, some with fans in the arenas, the league and its players union agreed to a raft of policies and protocols governing where they can go and what they can do once in another market.

Hotels must create private entrances for teams, separate from the public. Attending indoor social gatherings of 15 or more people outside of the hotel is prohibited, meaning bars, lounges and clubs are off- limits.

The league will soon require sensors to be worn during all teamorgani­zed activities as part of its contact- tracing program, according to ESPN.

The rules are tight, but leeway is built in. Under certain provisions, travel parties can eat at league- approved restaurant­s. Teams can arrange for hotel space of at least 2,000 square feet to be converted into a lounge or game room. Such allowances aren’t ironclad guarantees because more stringent local rules can supersede the league’s guidelines.

“Traveling party members must comply with state and local public health ordinances or other laws or regulation­s applicable to profession­al sports teams entering another state for a game,” according to the league’s protocols.

Though road trips have always differed city by city, the discrepanc­ies in local and state health regulation­s have added a new wrinkle.

Traveling to at least 41 games a year for 28 NBA seasons has made the road feel like home for Terry Stotts, the Portland Trail Blazers coach whose familiarit­y visiting everywhere from Toronto to Texas is built around two things: where experience tells him he can f ind a good walk and a good restaurant.

He couldn’t do either during a four- day stay in Los Angeles this week.

Takeout- only dining had long ago rendered moot Stotts’ habit of watching NBA games on his off night at a local sports bar. Restrictio­ns limiting the size of gatherings also prohibited the Trail Blazers from eating meals together inside their hotel.

It’s a stark contrast to rules that, in certain markets, will allow players, coaches and staffers to dine out with people who are not part of the team’s traveling party, even if the practice is officially discourage­d.

“L. A. County recommende­d that we not leave the hotel, so that’s been probably the biggest restrictio­n,” Stotts said. “And we can’t meet as a group at the hotel.”

Where players have groused in the past about spending too much time around one another on long road trips, teams are now searching for acceptable reasons to meet. Portland scheduled two shootaroun­ds and a practice while in L. A. just to be able to spend time with one another, Stotts said.

“I know our guys are taking the pandemic seriously and taking precaution­s and we went through the bubble experience,” Stotts said. “So as much as it is a little disconcert­ing to not be able to leave [ the hotel], we all understand how important it is.”

While in Denver for a Christmas matchup with the Nuggets, the Clippers could not meet in a group at their hotel, which meant that Christmas Eve dinners were ordered through the hotel’s restaurant and picked up in individual­ly wrapped packages.

League observers have stressed that the inconvenie­nce of travel rules are in place for a reason, and that any sacrifices pale in comparison with the disruption­s caused by COVID- 19 across the country.

“Not being able to meet as a group and as a staff in the meeting rooms we usually have, that was different,” Clippers coach Tyronn Lue said. “Not being able to eat lunch or breakfast after shootaroun­d together and get our bags to go, that was different as well. But, you know, it’s not a very big — it’s not a drastic change. Just being more to yourself, I guess, than being in bigger groups. But our guys handled it well.”

One day earlier in Tampa, Fla., the temporary home of the Toronto Raptors after travel restrictio­ns kept them from playing in Canada, looser state and local regulation­s allowed 3,800 fans to watch from the stands during the Raptors’ Dec. 23 opener against New Orleans.

After eight games inside empty arenas this season, the preseason included, the Clippers will play Friday in Salt Lake City in front of paying fans for the f irst time since March 10.

Utah sold more than 1,900 tickets for a home game last week against Minnesota.

“To have the fans there will be appreciate­d, it’ll be added energy toward the game, but I’m not all too concerned about it, because I believe the NBA has done everything it needs to do, protocolwi­se,” said Clippers center Mfiondu Kabengele. “So I feel safe.”

Some teams have considered staying at resorts with a campusstyl­e footprint rather than a downtown tower to allow more freedom of movement.

“Things are gonna be different, it’s gonna be weird,” Clippers center Serge Ibaka said. “I think what the NBA did is try to provide the best they can to make sure we’re safe, we play it safe.

“We love this game, we love to play this game, so we have to do whatever it takes to be safe.”

TONIGHT AT UTAH

When: 6 PST

On the air: TV: Prime Ticket. Radio: 570

Update: The Jazz will be playing on the second night of back- to- back games after facing Phoenix on Thursday.

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? THE CLIPPERS will play tonight in Utah in front of paying fans for the f irst time since March 10.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times THE CLIPPERS will play tonight in Utah in front of paying fans for the f irst time since March 10.

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