Royal Oak Tribune

Rough road: Playing during pandemic means ‘long days’

- By Brian Mahoney and Tim Reynolds

When Washington coach Scott Brooks was a player and would ask coaches about their profession, the response was always the same: It is a lonely job.

Never more so than now, probably.

As if playing games in arenas that are somewhere between mostly and entirely empty during a stillragin­g coronaviru­s pandemic wasn’t hard enough, the rules for players and coaches — both home and on the road — are getting even tougher. The NBA and the National Basketball Players Associatio­n on Tuesday agreed to stiffer protocols, including ones where players and coaches will essentiall­y have to stay in their hotels during road trips except for team activities and without receiving visitors.

“We have to keep everything in perspectiv­e,” Brooks said. “It’s tough, but we get to do something we really, really love to do and we’re fortunate. It’s a privilege to be able to be in the NBA, to coach, to play. I’ve been fortunate enough to be able to do both.”

Even without the new rules, solitude and loneliness have been hallmarks of road trips already this season. Denver coach Michael Malone couldn’t go see family when the Nuggets visited New York — his birthplace and where his NBA coaching career began with the Knicks. He wanted to see his parents on the Nuggets’

recent trip there; he couldn’t, and now hasn’t in nearly two full years.

“A big part of coming back has always been a chance to see my mother and my father, brothers, sisters, friends and so on and so forth, and that is not the case this year,” Malone said. “So, definitely takes away from this opportunit­y.”

The NBA’s rules are superseded by local regulation­s, which in Los Angeles County have been among the most restrictiv­e. Residents are under a stay-at-home order, indoor and outdoor dining isn’t allowed, and Chicago coach Billy Donovan said the Bulls could only have one person at a time in a workout room set up in the hotel when they played the Lakers and Clippers at Staples

Center.

“Guys are pretty much locked up in their rooms,” Donovan said. “There’s very, very little anybody can do. Days are long for these guys.”

For at least the next couple weeks, from an NBA perspectiv­e, L.A. will be like the rest of the U.S.

“It’s difficult. You know, games end and you go back and get a little plastic dish of food,” said San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich, who loves visiting restaurant­s on the road, particular­ly the ones with magnificen­t wine offerings. “I’m not complainin­g — we have it very good — but you go back to your room and you eat your food. You don’t eat with your team or your coaches or anything like that. So, the camaraderi­e part of team sport and all that is kind of out the window.”

The latest rules were agreed to by the league and the NBPA weren’t unanimousl­y well-received. Oklahoma City guard George Hill, who was with the Milwaukee Bucks last season and was one of the drivers of their decision to sit out a playoff game in response to the Jacob Blake shooting by police in Wisconsin, made clear he wasn’t a fan of the new restrictio­ns — including the ones saying players and coaches had to essentiall­y isolate again on the road.

“If it’s that serious, then maybe we shouldn’t be playing,” Hill said.

Utah guard Donovan Mitchell missed 15 of his 23 shots when the Jazz lost to the Knicks on a recent trip. He didn’t think the fan-less atmosphere was the reason, though it certainly made Madison Square Garden feel far different than the place Mitchell attended growing up not far from the city.

The celebritie­s in the seats and the memories of the massive events the arena has staged have never been lost, no matter how many games the Knicks have. But the noise now comes from piped-in fan reactions, not Spike Lee leaping out of his seat to do it himself.

“It’s different, seeing the arena like that, empty, nobody there,” Mitchell said. “It’s definitely different ... definitely weird.”

It is also the new normal, at least for now.

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