The Day

NBA, players sign off on final terms

Despite growing concern over COVID-19 crisis, basketball’s season to restart July 30

- By TIM REYNOLDS Associated Press

Acknowledg­ing that no option would have been risk-free during a pandemic, NBA Commission­er Adam Silver said Friday that the concern shared by the league and its players surroundin­g next month's restart of the season is rising as coronaviru­s cases in Florida keep climbing.

That said, the league and the National Basketball Players Associatio­n is moving forward — finalizing the deal that will bring the NBA game back and see teams start arriving at the Disney campus near Orlando, Florida in less than two weeks.

Many of the details of the agreement were already known, such as how “stringent health and safety protocols” would be in place for the 22 teams that will be participat­ing, that no fans will be present and that games will be held in three different arenas at the ESPN Wide World of Sports complex.

The season is set to restart on July 30 with games featuring the Utah Jazz vs. the New Orleans Pelicans and the LA Clippers vs. the LA Lakers.

But when those protocols were completed, the Orange County, Florida area — which includes Orlando — had seen a 5% rate of positive coronaviru­s tests over the preceding 10 days. In the 10 days that have followed, the rate of positive tests there has soared to just over 15%.

“We ultimately believe it will be safer on our campus than outside it,” Silver said Friday afternoon. “But the signal we are sending is this is definitely not business as usual. This is far from an ideal way to finish our season, and it will require tremendous sacrifices from all those involved.”

Silver said the league is working with Disney to test at least some of their on

Old Lyme Country Club

Rob’s in his 34th season at OLCC. He started out working at Veterans Memorial in Springfiel­d, Mass., and also served as an assistant pro at Misquamicu­t Club in Westerly before coming to Old Lyme. He’s also been at Lost Tree Golf Course in North Palm Beach, Fla.

No. 3, a 120-yard par 3. “It’s a dynamic little hole. Short par threes in the country have kind of gone by the wayside. I still think it’s just a challengin­g little hole. You can make a birdie or an easy double-bogey.”

Seminole Golf Club, North Palm Beach, Fla. He had his playing interview there for a job at Misquamicu­t. “That place has fond memories for me.”

Four. His first one came on the 14th hole at Lost Tree in 1985. He’s had three at OLCC — two on No. 3 and one on No. 7.

“You’ll play better if you just enjoy the game. Don’t set your expectatio­ns too high. It’s the hardest game in the world. Just enjoy yourself.”

His father Edward, Ben Hogan, Arnold Palmer.

Rob, who grew up in Springfiel­d, Mass., got an early start in the sport, beginning to play at the age of seven. He could walk from home to the Veterans Memorial where he made a deal with the club pro there. “I took care of the pro’s dog and the pro gave me lessons for taking care of his dog. I was eight years old and I picked up balls for the pro. He’d watched me hit balls at the end of the day. It was fun.” His father, who passed away four years ago, had a big influence on Rob’s career.

Rob played on his high school golf team, serving as captain for two years. He pursued a golf pro career after graduation in 1976. The turning point came when he took a job at the Misquamicu­t Club in 1986. “It opened a lot of doors for me,” Rob said. “I would have never left there except this was a good opportunit­y to become a head pro.” He found a home at Old Lyme, where he’s more than a golf pro. He’s part of the family.

The membership has evolved over the years. More families have joined. Rob really enjoys teaching and running the junior program. “There’s always been a thirst for instructio­n here, so that’s been good.” site employees that could be in the same room as NBA players, which he believes will make the setting even safer.

Once players get to Disney, they will be tested daily. Testing is in an every-other-day mandatory phase now for the 22 teams set to participat­e in the restarted season. and the results from Tuesday's first 302 tests saw 16 players positive for the virus.

“I think one would have been concerning," NBPA executive director Michele Roberts said. “But, God forgive me, I was frankly to some extent relieved that the number was not higher . ... If nothing else, it told me that the great majority of our players have been doing exactly what they should have been doing to keep themselves safe."

Silver said it may be possible that, if there was a significan­t spread of the virus within the Disney campus, “that might lead us to stopping." He said the league has not precisely concluded what number it would take for the league to shut down the season once it resumes, and continues working with the players and health officials to determine what that number should be.

The league and the union announced earlier this week that addressing racial issues and inequality in the country will be a priority during the restarted season. Silver, Roberts and others — including union president Chris Paul of the Oklahoma City Thunder — stressed Friday that those matters will be an extremely critical component of what happens at Disney, both on and off the floor.

While dealing with the plans for pulling off a restarted season and then playing a full postseason during a pandemic, the league and the union have had numerous meetings as well to discuss options for how to address issues such as the recent killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery, the ongoing problem of police brutality and furthering the Black Lives Matter

movement.

“We all understand how powerful our voice is," Paul said. “Even if we're back to playing, our voice can still be heard ... on an unbelievab­le platform. You're going to continue to hear us. It's never a `shut up and dribble' situation.”

Silver said the NBA looks at itself as a key partners to the messages that players want to be seen and heard at Disney, during a time of what he called enormous social unrest. “We may be the most uniquely qualified organizati­on in the world to affect change,” Silver said, noting that the league's players are some of the best-known Black personalit­ies on the planet.

The NBA suspended its season March 11 because of the virus. It took the league more than three months just to get to this point, and it would seem most unlikely that once teams get into what the league hopes is a secure environmen­t at Disney that issues such as more positive tests wouldn't be a factor.

Course: Years as pro:

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— Gavin Keefe

 ?? JAE C. HONG/AP PHOTO ?? In this Oct. 8, 2019, file photo, NBA Commission­er Adam Silver speaks prior to a preseason game between the Houston Rockets and the Toronto Raptors. Silver announced Friday that the NBA is set to restart on July 30 at the ESPN Wide World of Sports complex.
JAE C. HONG/AP PHOTO In this Oct. 8, 2019, file photo, NBA Commission­er Adam Silver speaks prior to a preseason game between the Houston Rockets and the Toronto Raptors. Silver announced Friday that the NBA is set to restart on July 30 at the ESPN Wide World of Sports complex.

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