Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Bucks close practice facility

Move comes after results of Friday COVID-19 tests

- Matt Velazquez

Over the past few weeks, the Milwaukee Bucks have been utilizing their practice facility for individual workouts ahead of the NBA’s planned restart at the end of July. Those workouts ramped up last week as all of the team’s players returned to Milwaukee for scheduled, socially distanced workouts.

Now, it’s unlikely those workouts will continue.

The Bucks shut down their practice facility Sunday after receiving the results of Friday’s coronaviru­s testing, according to a league source. The team still plans to leave for Orlando, Florida, on Thursday, but it isn’t expected to hold any more workouts before that time.

Adrian Wojnarowsk­i of ESPN was first to report this news.

Although the team has not released any details regarding the practice facility’s closure, the presumptio­n is that one or more members of the organizati­on – players, coaches or staff – have tested positive for COVID-19. The Bucks join the Denver Nuggets, Los Angeles Clippers and Miami Heat on the list of teams whose practice facilities are closed. The Brooklyn Nets recently reopened their facility after it, too, had been shuttered.

While the closure of Milwaukee’s practice facility is not a positive developmen­t, it is also not necessaril­y a major negative when it comes to basketball ramifications.

The league-best Bucks have more than three weeks before their season is scheduled to resume with a July 31 game against the Boston Celtics, meaning any member or members of the organizati­on who may have tested positive for COVID-19 could have time to recover and return to action.

Additional­ly, the Bucks have all but locked up the No. 1 seeding in the East, giving added time to any affected individual­s to recover before meaningful playoff games occur.

According to the NBA’s guidelines surroundin­g the season restart, any player who tests positive for coronaviru­s must immediatel­y quarantine and must have two negative tests before joining his team in Orlando.

However, basketball is not the most important aspect of this situation. Any

positive test means a person involved with the team is dealing with the novel coronaviru­s that has resulted in about 3 million cases and 132,000 deaths in the United States alone over the first half of the year. It also means there may be other people – their families, friends, neighbors or even strangers – who could have contracted the disease.

There is no telling how any person will handle the disease, meaning a single positive test could ultimately yield dire results on a wider scale.

There have been positive coronaviru­s tests across the NBA over the past few weeks, which was expected when the league hatched its plan to resume its season.

Despite those positive tests and facility closures, the expectatio­n is that plan will continue, with the Bucks still playing a part and going to Orlando as scheduled.

“There’s definitely going to be some type of caution with this virus out there wherever we’re at nowadays,” Khris Middleton said after a workout on Friday.

“I think the way the NBA has set up this bubble it’s going to protect us better than being out and about, I feel like. There’s so many testing requiremen­ts, so many visitor requiremen­ts, stuff like that where not just anybody can come in and out and visit.

“I don’t think guys are extremely scared of going down to Orlando because of the virus, but we’re definitely cautious a little bit, which I think everybody has to be.”

 ?? JOURNAL SENTINEL FILES ?? The Bucks closed their training facility Sunday after COVID-19 testing Friday.
JOURNAL SENTINEL FILES The Bucks closed their training facility Sunday after COVID-19 testing Friday.

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