Santa Fe New Mexican

After 3 months, bidding farewell to NBA bubble

- By Ben Golliver

NKISSIMMEE, Fla. inety days after I checked into the NBA’s restrictiv­e bubble at Disney World, I find myself with a recurring daydream: I slide into the back seat of an airport-bound black car and begin stripping off my encumbranc­es.

I remove my MagicBand, which grants access to my hotel room, the arena and practice facilities, from my right wrist. Next I ditch my tattered credential, which I wear around my neck at all times to ward off inquiries from security guards. I take off my Kinexon proximity alarm, which beeps like a smoke detector anytime I linger within six feet of another human. Then I slide my Oura tracking ring, which monitors my temperatur­e in real time, off my right middle finger. Finally, I delete a health tracking app, which requires me to input my temperatur­e and blood oxygen level every morning, from my iPhone.

Even in the dream, I keep my mask on. I will soon be free from the bubble, but not from the novel coronaviru­s pandemic that made it necessary.

“You only really get it if you’re here,” Oklahoma City Thunder

guard Chris Paul said of the bubble, and he was right. Depending on the hour, it was whimsical or grueling, exhilarati­ng or dishearten­ing, bustling or tedious, sunny or stormy. Everyone arrived in July knowing that it would be a once-in-a-lifetime experience, and there’s a sadness in knowing that all future reporting assignment­s will pale in comparison.

The bubble opened with an overwhelmi­ng rush of media interest which mostly consisted of morbid curiosity and rubberneck­ing. I did countless interviews about my seven-day quarantine inside a hotel room, and everyone asked about what would happen if someone got sick or died. Once it became clear that the NBA’s stringent health protocols were working, the ambulance-chasers moved on.

Now, physical and mental exhaustion reigns and it has become clear that the bubble was meant for die-hards. Two of the league’s most prominent

workout maniacs — LeBron James and Jimmy Butler — are going head-to-head in an unpredicta­ble and fiercely-contested Finals. It’s fitting that James’s Los Angeles Lakers and Butler’s Miami Heat are the last teams standing after a months-long war of attrition. Either will be worthy champions, and there should be no talk of an asterisk.

This series is the least-watched of the 10 Finals that I have covered due, in part, to calendar disruption and competitio­n from the NFL and MLB, but it is also the most important by a wide margin. The NBA had never faced an existentia­l threat like the pandemic, and its ability to partner with the National Basketball Players Associatio­n to construct a functional restart that will crown a champion is an incredible feat that must be remembered by history. This was not guaranteed: a coronaviru­s outbreak and a canceled season were very real alternativ­es in March.

If James can finish off a sensationa­l run with his fourth championsh­ip, it should be regarded as one of the most impressive achievemen­ts of his career. He has guided the Lakers to a 15-5 postseason record and a 3-2 series lead over the Heat, and he has brought the absolute best out of Anthony Davis. At 35, he picked apart opponents with his mind and held up better than players in their mid-20s. He did it all while campaignin­g for Breonna Taylor, organizing player protests and absorbing immense heat from political adversarie­s. If James wasn’t so gung-ho about competing, the whole experiment might not have happened at all.

As James and his fellow stars found themselves balancing basketball and advocacy, it’s fitting that the bubble’s most memorable moment was a game that never took place. I’ll never forget plugging in my laptop Aug. 26, setting out my iced tea, taking my seat and then looking up to realize that only one of the two teams was on the court. That impromptu protest by the Milwaukee Bucks was history in the making, front-page news that connected sports, politics, racial protests and labor relations.

I tapped out my story on my iPhone while standing outside the Bucks’ locker room for hours, sweating our print deadline. The stakeout lasted so long that players occasional­ly emerged to walk silently past a group of reporters to use the restroom. Meanwhile, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and hundreds of other Twitter users debated whether their action should be called a boycott or a strike. The protest led to a three-day shutdown and short-lived threats of calling off the playoffs. Even in the tensest moments, I trusted that the players’ sweat equity would see the bubble through.

The bubble humanized the players. The walls of fame in the outside world — sunglasses, tinted windows, security details, gated communitie­s — were less pronounced in this environmen­t. The players’ hotels were off limits to the media, but they were stuck dealing with reporters almost every day. The coaches and superstars shouldered a heavy media burden well.

I will remember the bubble fondly, but I won’t miss much. I loved the courtside seats, and the wildlife around campus. I cherished my ability to attend every single playoff game from the start of the second round, something that might never again be possible. I enjoyed seeing the referees compete at morning pickleball like it was their own profession­al sport.

This wasn’t summer camp and it wasn’t glamorous. I have lived for three months in Casitas 4432, a simple hotel room which I have treated like a dorm. My mother would be appalled by the cold pizza in the corner and the piles of dirty clothes, but visitors were forbidden.

Most nights, I stayed up past 3 a.m., and I occasional­ly watched so much basketball that I left the arena dizzy and lightheade­d. Work/life balance was nonexisten­t, and my iPhone screen time peaked at more than 11 hours per day in August.

There were moments of frustratio­n and heartbreak. Close friends struggled with isolation; colleagues and players departed to attend funerals. Media members who left the bubble early did so with guilt and fear of missing out; many of those who stayed struggled with homesickne­ss.

In September, wildfires leveled countless towns in my home state of Oregon. I had prepared myself for the bubble’s monotony and workload, but that still got me.

A major key to the bubble’s success was the NBA’s attention to detail on everything from logistics to event planning to internal communicat­ion. There were many policies and rules, but they were logical and regularly reinforced. New arena innovation­s like video boards, enhanced microphone­s and a sliding rail camera all functioned as expected. There were daily emails to keep reporters in the loop, and there was always food when there was supposed to be food. When a bus skipped a stop and left me hanging, an employee issued a walkie-talkie dispatch to summon a new charter bus to transport me — only me — to the arena.

There was a personal kindness expressed by NBA Commission­er Adam Silver, Deputy Commission­er Mark Tatum, Vice President of Referee Developmen­t Monty McCutchen and the league’s public relations staff, headed by Tim Frank, that is difficult to describe without sounding like a Stockholm syndrome victim. The league’s leaders were receptive to feedback and open about their limitation­s, and their steadfast desire to complete the restart without a positive test revealed compassion rarely seen in big business.

While the bubble accomplish­ed its mission and salvaged the postseason, it didn’t save the league. Far from it. Still facing billions in projected losses, the NBA and the players union must negotiate the financial terms for next season and decide when to start, where to play and whether to allow fans in the arenas. The league’s television ratings took a massive hit due to the four-month hiatus. The bubble was a Band-Aid, not a panacea.

I leave the bubble with pride in my work and gratitude that the Washington Post invested significan­t resources in this assignment. I leave with cheesy Disney T-shirts that I will never wear, a 3,600-piece LEGO Lamborghin­i set I spent two months building and plans to write a book about this experience. I leave confident that I will never willingly return to Disney World unless the NBA comes calling again.

I also leave with trepidatio­n. The onerous rules have made me feel immune to the coronaviru­s, and I must reacclimat­e to an outside world where more than 210,000 Americans have died and the president has been hospitaliz­ed. After being tested 90 times during my bubble stay, I wonder how long it will be before I seek one out for peace of mind.

For all its challenges, the bubble worked. No one has died. No players have gotten sick. No games have been canceled or postponed. That will be the restart’s legacy. The bubble was an impressive public health achievemen­t at a time when the United States desperatel­y needed one, and it should stand as a model for what can be done when immense resources are deployed thoughtful­ly, in good faith and in line with medical and scientific recommenda­tions.

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