No Covid vaccine mandate for NBA players – Silver
NBA commissioner Adam Silver says the league won’t require players to be vaccinated against Covid-19, but if progress continues against the virus the league can play a normal schedule in “relatively full” arenas next season.
“Roughly half of our teams have fans in their arenas right now and if vaccines continue on the pace they are, and they continue to be as effective as they have been against the virus and its variants, we’re hopeful that we’ll have relatively full arenas next season as well,” Silver said Saturday (Sunday in Manila) in a virtual press conference on the eve of the All-Star
Game in Atlanta, Georgia.
Silver said there are no plans for any overseas exhibition or regular-season games in the upcoming campaign, but he remains confident teams will be able to play a full 82-game schedule starting next October and ending in June.
The commissioner said he believed it was a “personal decision” whether to be vaccinated “that players need to make just like everyone in our communities needs to make.”
He said the league and players association were working together to provide players with information on vaccines
“and also encouraging them to seek out information on their own” from personal physicians or other advisers.
Silver said that, to his knowledge, no NBA players had yet been vaccinated, although some coaches and other staff who qualified to be inoculated because of age or other reasons had been.
Even so, Silver said, the league’s coronavirus protocols including maskwearing, social distancing and rigorous contact tracing and quarantining, had allowed the season to proceed with only “a relatively small percentage of games” having to be postponed.