The Mercury News

Warriors, Sharks could host fans starting April 15

- By Wes Goldberg wgoldberg@bayareanew­sgroup.com

The California Department of Public Health announced new guidelines Friday that would allow the Warriors and Sharks to host a limited number of spectators for indoor games starting April 15.

Decisions will be made in the local jurisdicti­ons in which the teams play, so allowing fans to attend games at Chase Center or SAP Center for the first time since the outbreak of the coronaviru­s pandemic more than a year ago will be subject to the discretion of San Francisco and Santa Clara County public health officials.

As of Friday, both San Francisco and Santa Clara counties are operating in the

orange tier. In that tier, capacity is limited to 10% or 2,000 people, and capacity increases to 35% if all guests are tested or show proof of full vaccinatio­n.

For counties in the most restrictiv­e purple tier, indoor sporting events will not be allowed. In the nexthighes­t red tier, events will be allowed at 10-20% capacity depending on the size of the venue. Capacity limits increase in the orange and yellow tiers.

For the Warriors, this news was met with optimism, as the organizati­on had submitted an initial plan to host fans as early as November. Hopes were again high in mid-March when the city announced the Giants would be allowed to open their outdoor ballpark to a limited number of fans starting with their home opener, April 9.

The Warriors last played with fans in attendance on last March 10 against the Clippers. A day later, the NBA season was postponed.

The Warriors play four home games in seven days April 6-12, and, if there are no delays or setbacks, would have nine more home dates remaining, including the final six games of the regular season.

A Sharks spokesman said the team would need to review the guidance and see how it might be applied at SAP Center to see when and having fans back at the center is feasible.

The Sharks’ downtown San Jose arena has a seating capacity for hockey of 17,562. The NHL requires their arenas to meet certain air-flow and air-quality standards before fans can be allowed inside buildings.

Fans have been allowed back inside arenas in more than half of all 31 NHL cities, with the three California-based teams and all seven Canadian teams being among the exceptions.

The Sharks have eight scheduled home games left after April 15 before the end of the regular season on May 8, with the NHL playoffs beginning shortly after.

The last Sharks home game with fans present was on March 8, 2020.

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