The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

PAYROLL CUTBACKS

NBA players are to receive 25% less in their paychecks starting May 15.

- By TIM REYNOLDS AP Basketball Writer

Commission­er Adam Silver said it remains impossible for the NBA to make any decisions about whether to resume this season and that it is unclear when that will change.

But in a clear sign that at least some of the 259 remaining regular-season games that were not played because of the coronaviru­s pandemic will not be reschedule­d, the league announced Friday it will withhold 25% of player pay starting with their May 15 checks.

Silver, speaking after the league’s regularly scheduled April board of governors meeting — one that took place through video conferenci­ng and not the usual in-person setting in New York — said all options remain on the table for trying to resume play and eventually crowning a champion.

“I think there is a sense that we can continue to take the leading role as we learn more in coming up with an appropriat­e regimen and protocol for returning to business,” Silver said. “There’s a recognitio­n from (owners) that this is bigger than our business; certainly, bigger than sports.”

The salary decision was made in concert with the Na

tional Basketball Players Associatio­n, the league saying it would “provide players with a more gradual salary reduction schedule” if games are officially canceled or the rest of the season is totally lost.

Players will be paid in full on May 1. The cutback in salary has been expected for some time in response to the NBA’S shutdown that started March 11, and has no end in sight.

Silver said the league will weigh several factors as it continues to try to save the season, among them whether the infection rate of COVID-19 comes down nationally, the availabili­ty of largescale testing and progress on the path toward a vaccine.

“All these team owners are in this business because they love the game,” Silver said. “They love the competitio­n, and I know from my conversati­ons with players they feel the same way. But when you’re dealing with human life, that trumps anything else we could possibly talk about. That’s really where the conversati­on began and ended today.”

Team owners and NBA officials heard from Disney chairman Bob Iger during the call to discuss his company’s response to the pandemic, as well as from Dr. David Ho of Columbia University. Ho is an expert on viral epidemics and worked with the NBA when Magic Johnson was diagnosed with HIV in 1991.

Silver said Iger shared that he’s been often asked about a return to normalcy.

“To steal a line from Bob, when he was asked by several people about particular timelines, he said from his standpoint ‘it’s about the data, and not the date,’” Silver said.

The NBA playoffs would have started Saturday. If none of the 259 outstandin­g regular season games are played, the league’s players would lose about $800 million in gross salary.

Taking 25% out of checks on May 15 — and, presumably, checks on June 1 and June 15 should play not resume by then — would amount to players across the league missing $40 million in each pay period.

The reduction in pay is in anticipati­on of what the Collective Bargaining Agreement between the league and its players describes as a “Force Majeure Event” — the legal term for unforeseea­ble circumstan­ces, such as an epidemic or pandemic. Per the CBA, players could lose 1.08% of their annual salary for each game that is canceled.

Silver said the shutdown means “revenues, in essence, have dropped to zero. That’s having a huge financial impact on team business and arena business.”

In other matters Silver discussed Friday:

MORE PLAYER POSITIVES

There were 10 players known to have tested positive for coronaviru­s as of late March: four from the Brooklyn Nets including Kevin Durant, two from the Los Angeles Lakers, Christian Wood of the Detroit Pistons, Marcus Smart of the Boston Celtics, and Rudy Gobert and Donovan Mitchell of the Utah Jazz.

More players have tested positive since, Silver said.

“For privacy reasons, we’re not reporting” any other positive tests, Silver said.

NO DEADLINES

Silver said there is no cutoff date in mind for a decision to be made about playing some games or calling everything off.

“All rules are off at this point during the situation we find ourselves in and the country is in,” Silver said. “If there is an opportunit­y to resume play, even if it looks different than what we’ve done historical­ly, we should be modeling it . ... We don’t have a good understand­ing of exactly sort of what those standards are that we need to meet in order to move forward ... because the experts don’t necessaril­y, either.”

RETURN-TO-PLAY SITES

The NBA is still listening to ideas from those pitching so-called “bubble” scenarios as a way to resume play. Teams would be brought to a site or sites to finish a season in a way that theoretica­lly could minimize exposure risks.

Sites such as Las Vegas, Los Angeles and the Disney complex near Orlando have been mentioned as possibilit­ies. But Silver said the league isn’t actively pursuing any such “bubble” plan yet, again citing so much uncertaint­y in so many areas.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Fans leave the Golden 1 Center after the NBA basketball game between the New Orleans Pelicans and Sacramento Kings was postponed at the last minute in Sacramento, Calif., Wednesday, March 11, 2020. The league said the decision was made out of an “abundance of caution,” because official Courtney Kirkland, who was scheduled to work the game, had worked the Utah Jazz game earlier in the week. A player for the Jazz tested positive for the coronaviru­s.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Fans leave the Golden 1 Center after the NBA basketball game between the New Orleans Pelicans and Sacramento Kings was postponed at the last minute in Sacramento, Calif., Wednesday, March 11, 2020. The league said the decision was made out of an “abundance of caution,” because official Courtney Kirkland, who was scheduled to work the game, had worked the Utah Jazz game earlier in the week. A player for the Jazz tested positive for the coronaviru­s.
 ?? STEPHEN M. DOWELL - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The seats are empty at the Amway Center in Orlando, home of the NBA’S Orlando Magic, on Thursday, March 12, 2020. The NBA has suspended the season due to the coronaviru­s.
STEPHEN M. DOWELL - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The seats are empty at the Amway Center in Orlando, home of the NBA’S Orlando Magic, on Thursday, March 12, 2020. The NBA has suspended the season due to the coronaviru­s.

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