The NBA must come up with a better COVID-19 plan

You could certainly say that the NBA is working as intended. The league’s COVID-19 security measures – known euphemistically as its health and safety protocols – wreaked havoc on multiple teams in the first half of January. The Sixers played a game with only seven healthy bodies. Four games were postponed in a three-day period. The Mavericks had four players who tested positive for the coronavirus, and their practice facility was subsequently closed. The Wizards canceled training on Jan. 12 due to COVID-19-related reasons – after the Heat, the 76ers and Celtics had all players enter protocol after games against Washington in the previous week. The abbreviated rosters are a feature – not a bug – when it comes to the 2020–21 season. Playing through a pandemic requires the league to be extra diligent to prevent a massive outbreak, so even people who have only been exposed to someone else with the virus isolate themselves. It’s an obvious practice that, even when frustrating, tries to minimize the risk so that games can get stuck in it.

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