The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Silver: NBA, USA still may play in China in 2020

- By TIM REYNOLDS AP Basketball Writer

CHICAGO (AP) » The NBA and USA Basketball are still considerin­g playing in China later this year, though the complexiti­es of both the political rift caused by a tweet last fall and the ongoing health concerns in the world’s most populous country are making those plans seem decidedly uncertain.

NBA Commission­er Adam Silver said the discussion­s in both cases — pre-Olympic games for USA Basketball and the preseason games for the NBA — are ongoing, and said the decisions are not necessaril­y linked. It’s possible the U.S. may play there this summer and the NBA does not send teams this fall, Silver said.

“Those are issues that haven’t been decided yet,” Silver said Saturday night at his annual All-Star weekend news conference.

Things are not back to normal for the league when it comes to relations with China. The strain started Oct. 4, when Houston general manager Daryl Morey tweeted an image that read “Fight for Freedom. Stand with Hong Kong,” referencin­g several months of prodemocra­cy demonstrat­ions in the semiautono­mous Chinese territory.

The tweet wasn’t up for long. The fallout was massive and continues. A pair of preseason games between the Brooklyn Nets and Los Angeles Lakers in China were played days after Morey’s tweet, though without the support of several sponsors and with both teams playing in silence — none of the customary pre- and post-game media availabili­ties were held. The Chinese Basketball Associatio­n suspended its relationsh­ip with the Rockets, Chinese media giant Tencent and Chinese state television pulled some NBA broadcasts and Silver said the NBA quickly began experienci­ng significan­t financial losses.

Silver said it’s possible the NBA could lose as much as $400 million in revenue this year because of hits to the China market.

“Our games have not returned to CCTV, the government broadcaste­r,” Silver said. “My sense is they will at some point in the future. We are not pressing them. It’s a decision that is outside of certainly our control and I’m often not even sure where that decision lies.”

The NBA and Chinese officials have been talking, or at least were talking until much of the Chinese resources were redirected toward dealing with COVID-19, a disease stemming from a new form of coronaviru­s.

Basketball, understand­ably, has been pushed aside while the Chinese deal with a massive crisis.

“This game of basketball is a huge game, and I’ve been blessed and fortunate enough to travel to China a number of times,” All-Star Chris Paul of the Oklahoma City Thunder, who also is president of the National Basketball Players Associatio­n, said on Saturday. “A friend of mine, Pooh Jeter, plays over in China, and I actually wrote ‘Wuhan’ on my shoes the other night in a game in New Orleans. (But) this isn’t just a Wuhan problem. It’s an everyone problem.”

Wuhan is the city at the center of the outbreak. China’s government suspended most access to Wuhan on Jan. 23. Restrictio­ns have expanded to cities with a total of 60 million people in the broadest antidiseas­e measures ever imposed. Restaurant­s, shops and other businesses nationwide were ordered to close.

Through Friday, China reported a total of 66,492 cases of the virus, officially saying it was responsibl­e for 1,523 deaths. Japan — which will play host to this summer’s Tokyo Olympics — reported about 259 cases through Friday, with one death.

Internatio­nal competitio­ns in at least 14 different sports have been affected by the virus and the resultant concerns. Tokyo Olympic organizers and the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee have insisted that there are no plans to cancel or relocate the games.

“It’s impossible to predict which direction this epidemic will take,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, the director-general of the World Health Organizati­on.

It also makes it impossible to predict when matters between the NBA and China return to normal.

In other matters Silver addressed Saturday:

KOBE AWARD

The NBA is immediatel­y renaming the All-Star MVP trophy in honor of Kobe Bryant, the 18-time AllStar who — along with his daughter Gianna and seven others — died in a helicopter crash in Southern California last month.

All-Star weekend has taken on a somber tone this year, largely because of multiple tributes for Bryant and NBA Commission­er Emeritus David Stern, who died Jan. 1.

“I know it will be especially meaningful to that player that wins the first Kobe Bryant MVP,” Silver said. “So I’m sure there will be other honors as well, and as I mentioned, there are other things that we will be discussing with our board, the NBA board, when they meet in April to honor David. But this one seems so appropriat­e here at All-Star because nobody embodied All-Star more than Kobe Bryant.”

SCHEDULE CHANGES

Silver said he remains optimistic that schedule changes he has wanted — including an in-season tournament — are viable possibilit­ies.

The NBA was targeting adding such a tournament in 2021-22, the league’s 75th anniversar­y year. But plans for an April vote on such a change were tabled weeks ago, and the timetable is uncertain.

“I may have been a little naive in thinking that for the 75th anniversar­y, we could say let’s make all these changes,” Silver said. “We’ll sort of see what happens in the 75th anniversar­y, and we’ll go from there.”

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