Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Dragic forced to be a real night owl

- By Ira Winderman

Because it is a bubble, and you basically can’t go anywhere in the quarantine setting, there is no curfew for the MiamiHeat at DisneyWorl­d.

That helps because Goran Dragic, even when he isn’t working late, is up late. That’s because of son Mateo and daughter Viktoria.

With his family back in his native Slovenia, getting the kids off the school, even if by phone, means being up at 1 a.m.

“It’s a six-hour difference,” Dragic said amid the Heat’s playoff run that continued with Tuesday night’sGame5 against the Milwaukee Bucks in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

“So usually I don’t go to sleep until1a.m., so I can talk to the kids before they go to school. And then, when Iwake up, it’s already six hours ahead, so over there it’s already 4 or 5 p.m.”

So basically it’s, ‘Have a good day at school,’ followed by, ‘How was your day at school?’ It’s different.”

As is everything for about everyone amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Everything right now is crazy,” the veteran point guard said, “this entire world with what’s going on, with this virus, with the racial injustice, the bubble. Everything.

“If you look, everybody’s life’s changed. Everybody needs to adapt. And I did the same thing.”

Starting with getting his family in what Dragic feltwas a better place.

“When I went to the bubble,” he said of theHeat’s July 8 arrival at Disney, “my family, they went home to Europe because we felt it was the smart thing to do.

“There’s less cases there. And my wife, she has[to] help with our grandparen­ts.”

That decision, he said, has made it easier to concentrat­e on theHeat’s playoff run.

“I’m totally focused,” he said. “I know that my family is safewhenI talk to them. This is a business trip, like Jimmy [Butler] said. It’s exactly the same for me.”

ButDragic, 34, also is not too lost in the moment to realize howdistinc­tive a moment it is.

“I have to say everything feels different, including basketball,” he said. “First of all, you’re not playing in front of the fans. You’re in the bubble. You see the same teams every day. Everything is different.”

The biggest change, Dragic said, has been the shift from regular season to the playoffs.

“We know there are no fans, but we know it’s playoff time,” he said. “The games have been so physical.

“I only imaginehow­itwould feel if you were playing in Milwaukee. That would be a totally different experience, probably be tougher. And same thing for them if they would play in Miami.”

So it’s bed at 1 a.m., up early enough for the final school bell in Slovenia, and then another day in a Disney daze.

“It’s a totally different situation,” Dragic said. “But basketball­I feel like it has that feel like the playoffs because the game is so physical, andwe knowwhat is on the line.

“But definitely we miss the fans. Itwouldbea totally different atmosphere [with them].” just new

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States