New York Daily News

NBA set for holiday slate without some of its biggest stars

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So much for good health and good cheer.

Both are in short supply in the NBA this Christmas, especially for the 10 teams that will be playing on the holiday.

Superstars are sitting. Supposed super teams are struggling.

The games will go on, which is the most important thing during a time when the NBA has been forced to postpone nine of them because of a coronaviru­s surge.

But there is a chance they will go on without Kevin Durant, Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, Luka Doncic and Trae Young, who all were in the NBA’s health and safety protocols in the days leading into the five-game slate.

“You don’t want anybody out, whether it’s injury, COVID illness, whatnot,” Milwaukee’s Khris Middleton said. “I wish all those guys could be out there playing. But right now we’ve just got to deal with the cards that we’re dealt. You’ve got to go out there and perform, compete. Hopefully the fans will enjoy the product that’s on the court.”

It’s not going to be the one NBA fans — or sports fans in general — envisioned when looking forward to these holidays.

Sports has not been able to escape the surge in coronaviru­s cases driven by the new omicron variant. Bowl games are being canceled, teams are being forced to pull out of college postseason matchups, NFL players have been sidelined, and the NHL started its Christmas break early and its players are not playing in the upcoming Olympics.

In the NBA, more than 100 players have gone into protocols, leaving teams in some cases forced to sign players just to have the minimum eight required to play. As injury reports lengthened throughout December, with the Brooklyn Nets and Chicago Bulls both having 10 players in protocols at times, there were questions about whether the NBA would be better off just pausing the season.

“The league’s in a tough position,” Nets coach Steve Nash said. “Do you shut it down and extend it? Or what do you do, because you could shut it down and still the West Coast theoretica­lly could get hit by the virus later and then what, we shut it down again? So I could understand it’s tricky to navigate and there’s no right answer and there’s a lot of things to consider.”

His Nets visit the Lakers in the prime-time spot on the schedule. The other games: Atlanta at New York, Boston at Milwaukee, Golden State at Phoenix and Dallas at Utah.

Christmas is traditiona­lly the NBA’s biggest day of the season, often with catchy commercial­s and special uniforms to promote the games. It’s where Shaquille O’Neal and Kobe Bryant first faced off as opponents, where the most must-see teams or players get the spotlight to themselves.

The schedule, when it was unveiled in the offseason, was headlined by Brooklyn’s Big Three going to Los Angeles to visit LeBron James and the Lakers, who were expected to be a Western Conference powerhouse.

Now the Nets are a patchwork crew that could be down to a single superstar, with James Harden released from protocols Thursday but Durant and Kyrie Irving still sidelined. Maybe that will be good enough against a Lakers team that is without Anthony Davis because of a knee injury and is perhaps the league’s biggest disappoint­ment at 16-17 after a four-game losing streak.

Young was supposed to start the day at Madison Square Garden, where he was last seen bowing to the crowd after leading the Hawks to a victory to close out Game 5 of a first-round playoff series against the Knicks.

A team like Atlanta doesn’t get many Christmas chances. This is the Hawks’ first since 1989 and they might not get to really show themselves off.

“I know that when our players found out that we did have a Christmas game, for many of them it’s their first time, and they were pretty excited,” Hawks coach Nate McMillan said. “We’re hoping we can get guys back in uniform to play on Christmas Day.”

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