The Denver Post

Silver says he hopes Irving gets vaccinated

- By Tim Reynolds

Adam Silver, the basketball fan, would prefer to see Kyrie Irving on the court again with the Brooklyn Nets as soon as possible.

Adam Silver, the NBA commission­er, would prefer to see Irving vaccinated.

Silver said Monday he hopes Irving — one of the few players in the league who has not yet chosen to be vaccinated — changes his mind before long and clears a path to get back on the floor with the Nets.

“I would like to see our players vaccinated, because I think it’s a public service of sorts, particular­ly to young people who might not see the value of getting vaccinated,” Silver said on the eve of the league’s 75th anniversar­y season.

Irving cannot play for the Nets in large part because of rules unique to New York and San Francisco requiring vaccinatio­ns as a prerequisi­te for working. The Nets said last week Irving would not be involved in team activities “until he is eligible to be a full participan­t.”

And at this time, that means vaccinated. Silver would not disclose if he has spoken with Irving directly, but made his stance clear.

“There’s nothing fair about this virus,” Silver said. “It’s indiscrimi­nate in terms of who it impacts. And I think it’s perfectly appropriat­e that New York and other cities have passed laws that require people who both work and visit arenas to be vaccinated. That seems to be a responsibl­e public-health decision.”

About 96% of NBA players have been vaccinated, Silver said. That means that about 20, or less than one per team, are not. Anyone working games in proximity to players this season, from referees to stat-crew employees, must be vaccinated by league mandate.

“I hope that Kyrie, despite how strongly he feels about the vaccinatio­n, ultimately decides to get vaccinated because I’d love to see him play basketball this season,” Silver said.

In other matters Silver discussed Monday:

• Silver said the league’s $10 billion revenue projection for 2021-22 is based on having full arenas all season. He said the league missed revenue projection­s by about 35% last season, largely because arenas were not filled for much of the year.

• There still are no resolution­s to league investigat­ions into the sign-and-trade deals that sent Lonzo Ball to Chicago and Kyle Lowry to Miami this summer.

The investigat­ions are trying to determine if the teams broke rules by making contact with the players before the ascribed contact date.

• Adding an in-season tournament, something Silver has sought for some time and models in part after what exists in European soccer, remains a viable possibilit­y going forward. “I think we’re still in the process of formulatin­g what would be the best proposal for all concerned,” Silver said.

• Expansion will be a serious topic again, “at some point,” Silver said. Seattle is a city the league is eyeing, but the league won’t look at growing past the current 30 teams until it is “fully through the pandemic.”

Some other storylines entering the 2021-22 season:

Giannis’ goals

The last time there was an NBA contest that mattered, Giannis Antetokoun­mpo picked the perfect time to have the game of his life.

His numbers: 50 points, 14 rebounds. Only the third such game with that many points and rebounds in NBA Finals history. The Milwaukee Bucks were crowned world champions for the first time in 50 years, Antetokoun­mpo was the easy choice as NBA Finals MVP.

The Bucks will try to become the first Eastern Conference team to win back-toback NBA titles since Miami in 2012 and 2013.

Internatio­nal matters

This season is only the third in NBA history that will begin with the reigning MVP and NBA Finals MVP both hailing from outside the U.S. Antetokoun­mpo, who is Greek, won the finals award and Denver’s Nikola Jokic, from Serbia, was the overwhelmi­ng pick for the regular-season honor.

Nigeria’s Hakeem Olajuwon won both awards in the 1993-94 season, and in 200607, San Antonio’s Tony Parker (France) won Finals MVP while Dallas’ Dirk Nowitzki (Germany) won the regular-season award.

Back to normal

If all goes to plan, this will be the first season since 2018-19 where all teams play an 82-game schedule.

Teams played somewhere between 64 and 75 games in the 2019-20 season because of the interrupti­on caused by the pandemic, and the schedule called for 72 games apiece last season.

New ball

The league has a new ball this season, going back to a ball made by Wilson — which provided the game ball for the first 37 seasons.

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