Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Slow-motion offense: NBA moves forward with caution

- By Tim Reynolds

When NBA stars

The NBA says some players can voluntaril­y return to their team practice facilities starting on Friday, with some very specific conditions and only in places where local and state government­s have signed off on such openings.

It’s unclear how many — if any — players will be back on the floor Friday when the league ban gets lifted. The Heat are allowed to open their doors for the first time in six weeks but won’t until at least Monday while it works out certain logistical details. The Magic aren’t going to welcome players back immediatel­y either. Same goes for the Jazz, the first NBA team to deal with the coronaviru­s after Rudy Gobert tested positive March 11 and the league shut down almost immediatel­y. And most teams aren’t allowed to open yet to because of local rules.

Basketball hasn’t been played in two months and the league, the teams and the players still seem to have a universal desire to get back to work, finish this season and crown a champion. But, perhaps mindful of challenges other leagues have faced in their efforts to resume play amid a coronaviru­s pandemic that has shut down the sports world, the NBA seems to be moving with extreme caution.

“The biggest goal is to have the confidence of the players and the staff that they can enter the facility safely,” Jazz GM Dennis Lindsey said.

Simultaneo­usly, everybody wants to play, and everybody wonders if it’s safe to play. It’s like all parties involved know that a major misstep now could doom any realistic chance of playing anytime in the next few months.

“Our task force at the league is studying how do we get back to playing basketball again, following the data, looking at every possible model,” Magic CEO Alex Martins said this week while addressing an Orlando-area economic forum.

And opening the practice

Phase One.

Phase Two, who knows come. It’s not imminent.

Games are not close. Getting players back into facilities is not a precursor to games being played, it’s more about keeping them out of public gyms and playground­s that are starting to reopen. Positive tests during individual training or practices could delay or destroy plans for games.

There are some reasons for hope. The NBA is still working toward a plan to test players if the season resumes. It has exchanged data with leagues across the world, and there have been some success courts when is that only will stories. Baseball is being played again in South Korea. MLS teams returned to fields Wednesday for workouts with restrictio­ns. Germany’s top soccer league has allowed players to return to training facilities, even though some staff and players have tested positive.

It’s the NBA’s turn to start seeing where it stands.

“There’s been this unpreceden­ted collaborat­ion and communicat­ion among scientists across the world right now,” said Dr. John DiFiori, the NBA’s Director of Sports Medicine. “What’s going on sports medicine sort of parallels that at a much different level of course. But there is an awful lot of that going on across the world right now. It’s at least daily communicat­ion in one way, shape or another with colleagues across the world in all these different leagues, because we’re all learning from each other.”

The rules that NBA teams will have to adhere to when they resume even the voluntary workouts are like none previously put in place. A 12-feet buffer between everyone, one player per basket, one ball per basket, no more than four players in the facility at once. Everyone must wear masks and gloves, the lone exception being players while they work out. Every player must undergo cardiac screening before resuming voluntary workouts.

 ?? TERRENCE ANTONIO JAMES/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? feet apart from each other.
TERRENCE ANTONIO JAMES/CHICAGO TRIBUNE feet apart from each other.

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