The Mercury News

COVID complicate­s Warriors’ loss in Toronto

- By Evan Webeck ewebeck@bayareanew­sgroup.com

TORONTO >> As the Warriors loaded their gear into the team buses late Friday night in the labyrinth of tunnels beneath Boston’s TD Garden, coach Steve Kerr was still in the process of deciding who would play the following night and whether the entire team would trek across the Canadian border for the finale of their road trip against the Toronto Raptors.

Bags were loaded on to the bus and unloaded. Five players, including Stephen Curry and Draymond Green were sent home, rather than risk getting stuck on the wrong side of the U.S.-Canada border for a game in which they weren’t going to suit up. A sixth player, Jordan Poole, was in the league’s health and safety protocols and was stranded in his hotel room in Boston needing to test negative twice, 24 hours apart, in order to rejoin the team.

The complicati­ons caused by the COVID-19 outweighed the game on the court, a 119-100 loss in which the Warriors trailed from the start and never pulled close, played in front of a half-capacity crowd inside Scotiabank Arena under new rules put in place by the province of Ontario.

“The last few days have been really difficult, with Jordan Poole going into the protocol,” Kerr said before tipoff. “Everything was sort of up in the air, especially with the testing. We weren’t sure how many people were going to pass their tests.”

It all made for a stark reminder that the latest wave of the COVID-19 pandemic was upon us.

“It feels like the whole league now is in a precarious spot,” Kerr said. “When you factor in the difference­s in the rules here and how that might manifest itself long term, all that stuff … We made the decision to do what we did thinking this is going to protect our team going forward.”

Even for fans listening at home, it

was hard not to notice the absence of color analyst Jim Barnett, who was also stuck in a Boston hotel room after testing positive for COVID-19. His symptoms, so far, have been mild, limited to a scratchy throat. But Warriors play-by-play man Tim Roye was left doing the broadcast by himself for a second straight night.

On the court, Kevon Looney was the only member of the Warriors to assume his normal spot in the starting five. He scored 10 first-half points — the sixth time in his career he’s reached double figures in a half — and finished with 12. Chris Chiozza and Damion Lee took the places in the backcourt normally occupied by Curry and Poole, while Juan Toscano-Anderson and Jonathan Kuminga filled out the Green and Andrew Wiggins’ spots. With nine players, the Warriors were only one above the NBA minimum, but six of them scored in double figures.

Kuminga, the 19-year-old lottery pick with freakish athleticis­m, was one of the few bright spots for Golden State its first double-digit loss of the season, a none too surprising result with the limited lineup the Warriors rolled out. Kuminga, though, was a frequent flyer to the hoop and even showcased a 3-point shot that until now had been missing from his repertoire.

With 26 points, he became the first Warriors rookie to score at least 25 points in his first NBA start since Chris Wright did it in 2012, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. His four 3-pointers on six attempts doubled his total from the entire season prior to Saturday.

The limited number of people inside the arena were forced to take additional precaution­s. Not only was everyone required to provide proof of vaccinatio­n, workers inside the arena had to return a negative result on a rapid test and take another PCR test after that. To enter the country, every member of the Warriors traveling party had to present negative test results within 72 hours of arrival. It was an even more complex process to get back into the U.S., with results required within 24 hours of traveling.

After Poole tested positive following Thursday’s round of testing, everyone who made it into Canada was cleared for re-entry into the U.S. after undergoing testing Saturday morning at the team hotel. By tipoff, all those results had come back negative.

Any player who tested positive could have also been forced to remain on the Canadian side of the border for 14 days in addition to entering the NBA’s health and safety protocols, which force any player who tests positive or comes in close contact who has to produce two negative PCR tests, 24 hours apart.

Those hoops proved too perilous to jump through for the Warriors group of veterans, who traveled directly back to the Bay Area from Boston, rather than cross the border.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG — THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP ?? The Warriors’ Jonathan Kuminga, center, reacts as he loses possession during the second half Saturday in Toronto.
CHRIS YOUNG — THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP The Warriors’ Jonathan Kuminga, center, reacts as he loses possession during the second half Saturday in Toronto.
 ?? CHRIS YOUNG — THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP ?? Scotiabank Arena was at half capacity as the Toronto Raptors took on the Warriors in Toronto on Saturday.
CHRIS YOUNG — THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP Scotiabank Arena was at half capacity as the Toronto Raptors took on the Warriors in Toronto on Saturday.

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