San Diego Union-Tribune

NBA’S VIRUS NUMBERS ARE STILL RISING

- BY TIM REYNOLDS Reynolds writes for The Associated Press.

The way Miami’s Caleb Martin sees things, he’s lucky.

He just missed seven games while completing the NBA’s health and safety protocols related to the coronaviru­s, the worst of his symptoms being a couple days of fatigue. And when looking at the still-rising numbers of positive tests around the league right now, Martin offered a stark assessment.

“It almost seems it’s inevitable,” Martin said.

The numbers in the NBA indeed keep getting higher and may continue that way for the foreseeabl­e future. Expanded testing, agreed to earlier this month, went into place Sunday for players who have yet to receive their booster shots. The new testing plan is expected to remain in place until Jan. 8, after weeks of urging by the league and the National Basketball Players Associatio­n for players to get boosted.

By early Sunday evening, the numbers of players known to be in the protocols was up to 116 — and probably slightly higher, considerin­g some teams had yet to update injury reports. Numbers can fluctuate quickly as players test in and out, and being on the protocols list does not

always mean someone has tested positive.

“I think any logical person would worry how far is this going to go, and there’s a couple teams that have quite a few people in the protocols. You don’t know where it’s going to go,” San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich said.

Almost all NBA teams are dealing with at least one known case of virus-related issues now, and some teams are down to mere skeletons of what an NBA team should look like. Toronto played Cleveland on Sunday with eight players, four of them

hardship signings brought on because 10 Raptors are currently in the protocols.

“Shoutout all the guys filling in to keep this season going — from unknown guys to the vets,” Raptors guard Fred VanVleet, one of the sidelined Toronto players, tweeted.

Here’s what the Orlando injury report looked like on Sunday: Six players out because of virus-related problems, another sidelined while he completes the process of getting cleared from a protocols stint, and another six players out with injuries.

Yes, that’s 13 players — from one team.

“You expect the unexpected,” Magic coach Jamahl Mosley said.

Golden State’s Draymond Green was the latest big name added to the protocols list on Sunday, less than 24 hours after the Warriors beat Phoenix in what was the best game on the league’s five-game Christmas lineup and probably one of the more anticipate­d games so far this season.

“This is the reality of this associatio­n right now,” Miami coach Erik Spoelstra said.

Spoelstra was missing, among others, point guard Kyle Lowry, head athletic trainer Jay Sabol and assistant coaches Chris Quinn and Caron Butler on Sunday. Quinn was at the arena — just not in the arena. He was waiting in a parking garage, watching a stream of the game, hoping a confusing testing situation got cleared up in time for him to go to work.

It didn’t.

Quinn probably could have coached Sunday and been fine, and Lowry told Spoelstra he felt like he could play.

“This virus is so complex that it really isn’t about us,” Spoelstra said.

 ?? DOUG MCSCHOOLER AP ?? Warriors’ Draymond Green, talking with coach Steve Kerr, is the latest big name added to COVID list.
DOUG MCSCHOOLER AP Warriors’ Draymond Green, talking with coach Steve Kerr, is the latest big name added to COVID list.

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