The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

NBA considerin­g a condensed offseason

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NBA players, fans and media members still catching their breath after a marathon 2019-20 season should begin preparing for a 100-meter dash of an offseason.

On a Board of Governors call last week, basketball’s decision-makers discussed the possibilit­y of condensing the 2020 offseason and shortening the 2020-21 season to 72 games in an effort to return the league’s calendar to its typical cycle, people with knowledge of the conversati­on confirmed. These plans — first reported by The Athletic, ESPN.com and the Associated Press — could see regular-season games begin before Christmas, rather than the midJanuary target previously discussed by NBA Commission­er Adam Silver and National Basketball Players Associatio­n Executive Director Michele Roberts. Moving up the start date and trimming 10 games could allow the NBA to complete its season before the Tokyo Olympics, which are slated to open in July 2021.

Make no mistake, the novel coronaviru­s pandemic continues to force the league, which reportedly fell $ 1.5 billion short of its original revenue projection­s for last season, to weigh painful compromise­s.

Reopening in December would be a tough ask for players on top playoff teams, especially those who competed in the Finals. Last season, 132 days passed between the last game of the 2019 Finals and the first game of the 2019-20 campaign. Thanks to this year’s four-month coronaviru­s hiatus and the Disney World restart, that period would be trimmed nearly in half to 73 days if the league started on Dec. 22.

Of course, not every team would feel the squeeze evenly: Eight of the NBA’s 30 teams haven’t played since the March 11 shutdown, and 22 teams have been idle since the first round of the playoffs completed on Sept. 2. Even so, the next two months will be a blur, as the NBA must finalize its schedule and financial agreement with the players union, hold its draft virtually on Nov. 18, conduct its free agency period and open training camps.

To understand why the NBA might prefer to rush back to the court, one must remember that the chief argument for delaying was to allow more time to reopen with fans in attendance. The wishful thinking went that a February start could theoretica­lly create a path for team owners to generate money through ticket sales and other game-day related sources, which typically account for 40 percent of the league’s $ 8 billion annual revenue.

The coronaviru­s has had other ideas. Instead of waning after a July surge, the virus reached new heights on Saturday with a record 83,734 new reported cases. With no end in sight and without a widely available vaccine, the NBA and its players are not in position to bank on a smooth, prompt and universal reopening of arenas. Indeed, each NBA team will be at the mercy of its local and state government officials to determine how and when it can host large indoor gatherings. In some jurisdicti­ons, arenas could remain empty or largely empty throughout the upcoming season and postseason if the virus continues unabated.

There are obvious financial benefits to an earlier start. Christmas is typically the regular season’s biggest showcase, and returning the playoffs to April, May and June would be far preferable to the August, September and October slate that saw ratings tumble due, in part, to competitio­n from the NFL, MLB and college football. Multiple reports indicated that a December restart could boost revenue by $500 million compared to a post-Christmas restart that would push the playoffs deeper into the summer or require additional cuts that would impact the NBA’s ability to fulfill its obligation­s to its regional sports networks by playing at least 70 games.

Biting the bullet on a shorter offseason this year would also set up a normal 82-game schedule and television windows for the 2021-22 season and beyond. Once the pandemic runs its course, the NBA, its players and fans would be positioned to return to normalcy.

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