Kitsap Sun

Silver: 65-game policy for awards working

- Tim Reynolds

INDIANAPOL­IS – In Adam Silver’s eyes, the NBA’s new 65-game policy is working.

The commission­er, in his annual All-Star weekend news conference, said Saturday night he believes the league’s rules, which mandate players must generally play in at least 65 games to be eligible for postseason awards, have had their intended effect.

“I can tell you that the number of games that players have participat­ed in is up this season,” Silver said. “And interestin­gly enough, injuries are actually down.”

There has already been some impact. Philadelph­ia center Joel Embiid won’t win a second consecutiv­e MVP award and his two-year reign as the league scoring champion will also end because he won’t play in enough games to qualify.

Indiana guard Tyrese Haliburton’s next contract might be worth more than $50 million less than he hoped if he doesn’t play enough games to qualify for a supermax – and at his current pace, he’d come up a bit short. Miami’s Jimmy Butler has already missed too many games to be an awards candidate.

“I just don’t like it, how it forces players to play if they’re injured to achieve something,” Denver center Nikola Jokic said.

The 65-game rule – which was collective­ly bargained with the NBA Players Associatio­n – went into effect this season and determines whether players are eligible for things such as the MVP award, an All-NBA Team, Defensive Player of the Year, an All-Defensive Team or Most Improved Player.

Silver said the league, as it does with most new policies, will review it after the one-year mark.

“Honestly, I do believe that if you win any type of award, I think you should have to play a significan­t amount of the season,” Boston forward Jaylen Brown said. “We’ve got guys who play half the season and win MVP. I’m not a big fan of that. But maybe 65 games might be a little too severe. Maybe they lessen it to 58 or something like that.”

In other news from Silver on Saturday:

Back to Paris

The NBA will play another regular-season game in Paris next season, and there are expectatio­ns in France that the San Antonio Spurs – featuring France’s Victor Wembanyama – will be in that game.

Silver wouldn’t confirm the Spurs heading to Paris next season, but said the league is still determinin­g what arena to play in when it goes there in 2024-25.

“Stay tuned,” Silver said. “In terms of the Spurs playing in Paris, I can tell you that Victor Wembanyama … it’s certainly something that he very much would like to see, his team playing in Paris.”

Player-referee relationsh­ips

There will never be a day when NBA players and referees stop disagreein­g, but Silver acknowledg­ed the relationsh­ip between the sides has some strains that can be improved.

Players tend to feel their concerns aren’t being heard, and when a call is missed teams are predictabl­y quick to criticize.

“I think this is a real area of focus for us, and we’re going to be working on it,” Silver said. “It’s easy to say ‘respect for the game.’ I think people recognize how the communicat­ion works; it’s not a typical workplace and we have to take into account the high stress they’re under. … There just has to be a two-way sense of respect. And so, I’m sympatheti­c to the frustratio­n and feel it’s an area where we can make progress.”

 ?? ?? Silver
Silver

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States