The Oklahoman

NBA eyes Dec. 22 start for season

League would also cut schedule to 72 games for one season

- By Jeff Zillgitt

The NBA is targeting a Dec. 22 start date for the 2020-21 season, a person with knowledge of the situation told USA TODAY Sports on Friday.

The person requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the discussion­s.

The season would include 72 games and finish before the Tokyo Olympics, allowing the NBA to get back on its normal 82- game, October- June schedule for the 2021-22 season, the person said.

While NBA commission­er Adam Silver had said that January was the more likely month to begin next season, he also kept open the idea that the league could start around Christmas.

“I' ve said previously that the earliest we would start at this point is Christmas ,” Silver said before Game 1 of the Finals on Sept. 30. “That's been a traditiona­l tent-pole date for the league, but it may come and go.”

Silver also said the league's goal was to have fans in arenas.

“All our efforts now are directed at returning our teams to NBA cities and NBA arenas, with the next step of moving fans into arenas,” he told USA TODAY Sports last week.

“We also have the benefit of additional learning from other leagues, namely baseball and NFL, that have been playing in front of fans at least in some markets. We continue to work with municipal authoritie­s and the CDC on designing an acceptable protocol.”

But Silver also acknowledg­ed the rising number of COVID-19 cases and said a majority of NBA teams were located in jurisdicti­ons where fans are not allowed in indoor

arenas.

The l eague may have t o begin t he s eason without fans.

The league was in a bind last season and did what it had to so it could finish the 2019-20 season.

It didn't overreact to lower TV ratings, but Silver also paid attention.

“The question is when do we get back on cycle,” he said.

“And I think even though there' s been discussion­s about us potentiall­y on a regular basis post- COVID playing well into the summer, I think we're learning a little bit more about our television audience as we are experiment­ing, and part of it is fewer people are watching television in the summer, different competitio­n, especially when you get into the fall with the NFL, college football and all that. So that's all into the mix, as well.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States