New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

For Nets’ Irving, no regrets or second guesses on eve of playoffs

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NEW YORK — Kyrie Irving cost himself millions of dollars in salary. He may have cost the Brooklyn Nets any realistic chance of winning the NBA title.

His decision not to be vaccinated against the coronaviru­s put him on center stage of the debate and left him ineligible to play in New York for most of the season. Irving was criticized for being stubborn and selfish, for thinking only about the individual in a sport that’s about the team.

Early in the season, he was bothered by some of the comments he heard.

Now it’s the postseason and Irving isn’t secondgues­sing anything.

“So I can’t address everybody, but as we move forward in time, I know that I made the right decision for me,” Irving said Friday.

Critics would say that all decisions Irving makes are about him. His off-court choices meant he wasn’t available to help share the scoring pressure with his close friend Kevin Durant.

He wasn’t around to show a championsh­ip commitment to James Harden, perhaps contributi­ng to the All-Star guard deciding his future wasn’t in Brooklyn.

Irving pays no more attention to those voices than he does the ones who still want to dwell on his turbulent time in Boston, where the Nets play Game 1 of their first-round series Sunday.

“I can really say that I stood firm on what I believed in, what I wanted to do with my body. I think that should be not just an American right, I think that should be a human right,” Irving said. “And when you stand for something like that, in a nature of society that we’re in where we have a lot more followers than we do leaders, then you’re going to be forced into being seen or somebody as a black sheep that people can attack and can clickbait your name and say these things that don’t really describe who you are or what you live like on a day-to-day basis.”

The No. 7-seeded Nets would likely be on their home court, instead of opening against the No. 2 seed if they had Irving all season. But he played in only 29 games, only a handful at home in the final days of the season after an exemption to New York City’s vaccine mandate made him eligible.

By then, more than 1,400 city workers had been fired for failing to comply with the mandate and there was no hope of the Nets meeting preseason expectatio­ns of being a dominant team. Harden had been traded to Philadelph­ia in February and Irving had been fined for all the games he couldn’t play because of his vaccine status. All the Nets could do was finish strong to qualify for the play-in tournament.

More than 96% of NBA players were vaccinated, including every other player for the Nets or New York Knicks. But Irving wouldn’t waver, saying he respected everyone’s opinion even though it was clear that not everyone would respect his.

“Some people disagree with me in public, some people disagree with me in private,” Irving said. “It doesn’t really bother me as much as it did in the beginning of the season, because everything was just so new. Everything was just being thrown in my face, in terms of like what I should be doing.”

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