The Columbus Dispatch

NBA deals with bubble life

- Marc Stein

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — LEBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers has likened his new surroundin­gs to a youth basketball tournament for grown men who happen to be some of the most recognizab­le sports stars on the planet.

CJ Mccollum of the Portland Trail Blazers combats the pangs he feels for his fiancée and his dog back home with ‘‘my essential oils and my dehumidifi­er and my books,’’ and the occasional indulgence in wine he packed.

Gone are the ostentatio­us arena entrances dressed in the finest fashions and the whirl of big-city night life. NBA players have gathered for the most extraordin­ary experiment in league history: to play out the rest of the season without fans on a confined campus and abide by a thick book of rules that includes assigned seats on the bench and prohibitio­ns on postgame showers until players return to a team hotel.

Life in what everyone calls ‘‘the bubble’’ is at once strange and mundane, with more than 350 players and the staffs of 22 teams thrown together in a restricted-access environmen­t at Walt Disney World.

On March 11, when Rudy Gobert of the Utah Jazz tested positive for the coronaviru­s before a game against the Oklahoma City Thunder, the NBA became the first major North American sports league to shut down. Now, some four months later, the league has summoned all but the eight teams with the worst records to the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex, where, starting Thursday, it will stage games over the next three months even as the pandemic rages across Florida and much of the South and West.

‘‘It’s such a unique experience,’’ Ian Mahinmi of the Washington Wizards said. ‘‘When is the last time the whole NBA was in one spot at the same time? It’s crazy.’’

Living together in relative isolation, in three team hotels, players are tested daily for the coronaviru­s and reminded to wear masks and observe social-distancing rules when they are engaged in any activity apart from playing, practicing or working out. Tests are returned far faster than for residents in surroundin­g areas because the NBA has hired a private laboratory to process the results for an estimated campus population of 1,500.

The limitation­s of the tightly controlled existence are such that some players look forward to practice sessions they may not have otherwise relished because ‘‘they like to get out of their rooms,’’ Orlando Magic coach Steve Clifford said.

Players, coaches and team personnel are not allowed to leave the campus without authorizat­ion and will live here for a minimum of six weeks. For the two teams that reach the NBA Finals, that stay will last until mid-october — provided the virus does not pierce the bubble.

‘‘It requires significan­t sacrifice from our players,’’ Adam Silver, the NBA commission­er, said in a phone interview from his home in the New York metropolit­an area.

Players arrived more than two weeks ago and have had nearly three weeks to get acquainted with the 113 pages of health and safety regulation­s that govern campus life. The depth of the regulation­s remains a shock to the system for many.

Spending any time in a teammate’s hotel room is forbidden. No caddies are allowed on golf outings, playing doubles in table tennis is outlawed — singles only — and there can be no sharing of goggles or towels.

Leaving the campus without permission carries one of the heftiest punishment­s: After he crossed a campus border to pick up a delivery order of chicken wings, Richaun Holmes of the Sacramento Kings was ordered to quarantine for 10 extra days and, at the league’s discretion, was subject to receiving the more invasive nasopharyn­geal swab for coronaviru­s tests, rather than the usual shallow nose and throat swabs that are standard here. Lou Williams of the Los Angeles Clippers began a similar 10-day quarantine Saturday after he was photograph­ed, on an excused absence to attend a family funeral, picking up dinner and spending time in a gentlemen’s club in Atlanta.

Playing video games has emerged as the most popular activity to combat isolation. Food variety was initially a big discussion point, but criticisms have dwindled as the league has increased the options.

As the pandemic rages just beyond the campus perimeter and while the country is roiled by protest and debate over race relations, far more than sports glory is on the line in the NBA’S comeback. The league is spending at least $180 million with ESPN’S parent company, Disney, and on its testing operation to ensure that the league’s 74th season ends the way the previous 73 did — with a champion crowned.

Achieving that goal would not only enable the NBA to avoid a potential loss of $1 billion in television revenue, but also allow its players, an estimated 80% of whom are Black, to protest racism and police brutality louder than ever before, as many have pledged, from a highly visible platform.

The players have vowed not to let the hoopla around the restart of the season obscure their efforts to speak out on social justice issues. ‘‘Black Lives Matter’’ is emblazoned in bold lettering near the scorer’s table at the three venues that will be used for games. And players, including the Lakers’ James, have used their interactio­ns with the news media to call for the arrest of the officers involved in Breonna Taylor’s death in Louisville, Kentucky, in March.

The NBA has not yet said how it would handle an outbreak on campus as the season resumes, but the bubble appears to be holding. The league announced that of the 346 players tested daily for the coronaviru­s from July 13 to 19, none tested positive for the virus.

‘‘From my standpoint, it’s going very well, and I’m cautiously optimistic that we’re on the right track,’’ said Silver, who is scheduled to make his first appearance on campus this week. ‘‘But I also recognize what we’re doing has not been done before, and the competitio­n is just beginning. The real test will come when players are comminglin­g, playing basketball without masks and without physical distancing.’’

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