USA TODAY US Edition

NBA season was always going to be mayhem

- Jeff Zillgitt Columnist USA TODAY

The NBA and its players signed up for managed mayhem. The 2020-21 season was never going to be perfect.

Players with COVID-19, contact tracing sidelining multiple players per team and forcing teams to play with eight players, the possibilit­y of postponed games if a team can’t have the minimum eight active players required in uniform, and in a scenario that isn’t here yet but lurking, a pause to the 2020-21 NBA season.

Houston had a game postponed because it didn’t have enough available players, Philadelph­ia played just seven in Saturday’s loss to Denver and then Miami didn’t have enough players for its game against Boston, which barely had enough players itself, forcing the postponeme­nt of Sunday’s game. On Monday, the league postponed two more games: New Orleans-Dallas and Chicago-Boston.

With the pandemic still in force – a record 4,085 people died of coronaviru­s-related issues on Thursday – this just isn’t an early-season hiccup for the league. It might just be the norm.

Until more people receive the vaccine – and Commission­er Adam Silver is clear the league won’t skip the line so its players and staff can get it – the NBA will deal with sub-ideal circumstan­ces all season. That’s the nature of playing in a pandemic, and the league, teams and players know that.

That’s why there’s no strong considerat­ion to pause the season three weeks into the start. Like many others, the league is trying to operate a business under trying circumstan­ces.

But it reminds me of what a highrankin­g team executive told me in November: This season will be more difficult than last season because there were so many things the league could control inside the bubble.

He’s not alone. Sixers coach Doc Rivers used just seven players in Saturday’s loss to Denver with 10 players out due to COVID-19, health and safety protocols and injuries.

“The concern is not COVID,” Rivers

said. “The concern is injuries because guys are playing so many minutes because we don’t have enough guys. … I’m looking at our stat sheet, we had, one, two, three guys plus-40 (minutes) and couldn’t be avoided. Now, we play again in two days and then we play again. That’s my concern with this, we have to be very careful how we navigate next week.”

Sometimes, a team is short-handed. It happens from time to time, and that’s why the league is not overreacti­ng. Denver beat Utah last season with seven players – before the pandemic hit.

But games with just eight available players aren’t sustainabl­e for a team over a significan­t period. The league is taking a measured approach to what has transpired, but there is the possibilit­y of extending roster sizes to compensate for multiple players missing the same game. The league doesn’t believe it is at that point.

Beyond injuries, there will be strange results. There are no level playing fields during a pandemic. Some teams will be impacted more than others.

The NBA has postponed four games and played two games with the minimum eight players available. The NFL moved or postponed 18 of its 256 regular-season games, according to The New York Times.

It’s not necessaril­y actual COVID-19 cases that are disrupting games. Since Dec. 2, 15 players have tested positive with at least a couple of more expected in the next round of results. It’s the contact tracing that has sidelined players, and the league’s stringent health and safety protocols dictate a player who was in close contact with someone with a positive test is out for seven days.

The goal of contact tracing is to prevent the spread or outbreak of COVID-19, which would create far more problems than a postponed game or occasional eight-man roster.

There will be times when the season doesn’t look good. But the league is willing to push through those games where one team is short-handed or a game requires postponeme­nt.

What’s happening this season wasn’t unexpected, and it hasn’t risen to a level where player safety is at risk and competitiv­e integrity is in doubt.

It’s the cost of playing sports in a pandemic.

 ?? TIM NWACHUKWU/GETTY IMAGES ?? 76ers coach Doc Rivers, left, used just seven players in Saturday’s loss to Denver with 10 players out due to COVID-19-related issues.
TIM NWACHUKWU/GETTY IMAGES 76ers coach Doc Rivers, left, used just seven players in Saturday’s loss to Denver with 10 players out due to COVID-19-related issues.
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