Miami Herald (Sunday)

Fewer games, more safety measures

- BY ANTHONY CHIANG achiang@miamiheral­d.com Anthony Chiang: 305-376-4991, @Anthony_Chiang

This will be a unique NBA season.

The league calendar is different, some of the rules are different, and there are lists of health and safety protocols teams must follow in order to have a functionin­g season during the COVID-19 pandemic.

With the Heat opening its two-game preseason schedule against the New Orleans Pelicans on Monday at AmericanAi­rlines Arena, here’s a guide on what’s different and what to expect this season:

Note: Some answers come from a 158-page Health and Safety Protocols manual that was recently distribute­d to NBA teams and was obtained by the Miami Herald.

Will NBA teams play a traditiona­l 82-game schedule?

A: No. With the season beginning on Dec. 22 (about two months later than a normal season begins) and projected to end in July (about one month later than a normal season ends), the league cut 10 games from the regular-season schedule.

Each team is scheduled to play 72 regular-season games at home arenas around the league this season amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Games will not be held in a quarantine bubble to start the season, and there is currently no plan to play any games in a bubble this season.

The Heat opens the season on Dec. 23 against the Magic in Orlando.

In order to help reduce travel and mitigate the spread of COVID-19, the NBA added a somewhat new element to the schedule. For teams that play twice in one market, the league is often having those teams play both of those road games in that respective city consecutiv­ely on one trip instead of having to make two separate trips to play those games.

Why did the NBA only release the first half of the 2020-21 regularsea­son schedule?

A: The league decided to release the regularsea­son schedule in two segments to allow for flexibilit­y in an uncertain world dealing with a raging pandemic.

The schedule for the second half of the season will be released toward the end of the first half (Dec. 22-March 4), and the second-half schedule will include the remainder of each team’s 72 games not scheduled in the first half and any games postponed during the first half that can “reasonably be added” to the second half of the schedule.

Are there any changes to the NBA’s playoff format this season?

A: The traditiona­l playoff format is still being used, with eight teams from each conference advancing to the playoffs and three best-of-7 series determinin­g which team will represent its conference in the best-of-7 NBA Finals series.

But there is one tweak to the normal format: A play-in tournament was approved on a one-year basis for the upcoming season.

The tourney will take place after the regular season and before the first round of the playoffs, and it will include the teams with the seventh-highest through the tenth-highest winning percentage­s in each conference.

The teams with the seventh-highest and eighth-highest winning percentage­s in each conference will each have two opportunit­ies to win one game to earn a playoff spot. The teams with the ninth-highest and tenthhighe­st winning percentage­s in each conference will each have to win two consecutiv­e games to earn a playoff spot.

At the end of the regular season, the team with the seventh-highest winning percentage in each conference will host the team with the eighth-highest winning percentage in its conference in a play-in game. The winner of the No. 7 vs. No. 8 matchup in each conference will be the seventh seed in the playoffs for its conference.

The team with the ninth-highest winning percentage in each conference will host the team with the tenth-highest winning percentage in its conference in a play-in game. The loser of the No. 7 vs. No. 8 game will host the winner of the No. 9 vs. No. 10 game, and the winner of that game will be the eighth seed in the playoffs for its conference.

Are rules surroundin­g NBA rosters different this season?

A: Teams are still only allowed to carry a maximum of 15 players on standard contracts and two players on two-way contracts during the regular season.

But two-way contract players will be allowed to spend more time in the NBA as a form of roster reinforcem­ent during a season played in the middle of a pandemic. Rather than being limited to spending up to 45 days with their NBA teams, two-way players will be eligible to be active for up to 50 of their team’s 72 NBA games.

The Heat’s roster is currently at the 20-player preseason limit (15 standard contracts, one twoway contract and four Exhibit 10 contracts), and must cut to the regularsea­son limits before Dec. 22.

When is the trade deadline?

A: This date has not been finalized yet. During a traditiona­l schedule, the deadline is usually in early February. But this season’s deadline won’t come until March, at the earliest.

Will there be an AllStar break this season?

A: An All-Star break is scheduled to take place from March 5-10, between the first half and second half of the regular season. But the break will not include an All-Star Game.

Plans for a revised AllStar 2021 will be announced at a later date.

Will fans be allowed to attend Heat home games at AmericanAi­rlines Arena?

A: No, not for the start of the season, at least.

The Heat announced Friday it will play Monday’s preseason opener against the Pelicans and its Christmas Day regularsea­son home opener against the Pelicans in a fan-free AmericanAi­rlines Arena. Nothing official has been decided yet beyond those first two home games.

As part of an email sent to season-ticket holders, Heat president of business operations Eric Woolworth said season-ticket holders “will be credited accordingl­y for any home games missed until we decide to host fans at AmericanAi­rlines Arena in 2020-21.”

Heat season-ticket holders are asked to call 786777-1400 or email

SeasonTick­etMembersh­ips@Heat.com with any questions.

What happens if a player tests positive for COVID-19 this season?

A: Players, coaches and staff have already begun undergoing regular PCR testing for COVID-19, and that will continue throughout the season. Players who test positive will have to miss at least about two weeks in most circumstan­ces, and also must successful­ly complete a cardiac exam before returning to the court.

There are two methods by which a player can return to play after a positive test:

A time-based resolution in which the infected person would have to remain in isolation until at least 10 days have passed since the date of the first positive test or the onset of any symptoms, if they have any; at least 24 hours have passed since their fever went away without the use of medication­s; and other symptoms have improved.

If a player is cleared on the time-based resolution, they must then spend two days working out by themselves when no other players are present at the facility while wearing a mask at all times. So any player who tests positive will have to miss a minimum of 12 days before returning.

The other is a test-based resolution in which the infected person would have to return at least two consecutiv­e negative PCR tests from samples taken at least 24 hours apart.

What will it take for a game to be postponed because of positive tests?

A: This is expected to be determined by the NBA on a case-to-case basis, like most other leagues have dealt with this question.

What would it take for the NBA to suspend the season?

A: This is unclear. As part of the Health and Safety Protocols document, the league says: “The occurrence of independen­t cases or a small or otherwise expected number of COVID-19 cases will not require a decision to suspend or cancel the 2020-21 season.”

 ?? DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com ?? With no fans permitted to begin the season, AmericanAi­rlines Arena will look like it did prior to the last Heat game played there on March 11 before the NBA shut down.
DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com With no fans permitted to begin the season, AmericanAi­rlines Arena will look like it did prior to the last Heat game played there on March 11 before the NBA shut down.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States