Faction of NBA players hesitant on restarting season in Orlando bubble, sources say

ByADRIAN WOJNAROWSKI
June 10, 2020, 6:09 PM

As a faction of NBA players hold conference calls to discuss uncertainty about restarting the season in the Orlando bubble, the NBA and Players Association are agreeing on a plan that would allow players to stay home without consequences, sources told ESPN.

There were 40 to 50 players on and off a conference call in the past 24 hours discussing a number of concerns centered on the restart in Orlando, but there's been no formal petitioning to the NBPA among any group wanting out of the 22-team resumption, sources said.

As players have started to come to terms with the restrictive and isolated nature of the Orlando bubble --- including no visitors until after the first round of the playoffs nearly seven weeks after the opening of mid-July training camp -- there's been increased dialogue about the prudence of restarting the season for a number of players, especially those on non-championship contenders, sources said.

Executives and coaches around the NBA have had significant concern about how players will adapt to an environment unlike any they've ever experienced -- and how those hurdles could impact the sustained competitive drive for teams. And many have worried, too, especially on those teams that aren't title contenders, if some players will start seeking avenues to bypass the resumption all together.

Players are citing a number of concerns, including family situations, the inability to leave the Disney World Resort campus, COVID-19 and the implications surrounding the emergence of social justice causes in the country, sources said. Participants in Orlando -- including players -- will not be allowed to leave the bubble environment without a 10-day quarantine upon returning to the Disney grounds, sources said.

Players with medical issues that might place them in high-risk categories could seek an independent examination to learn whether they would be excused from participation, sources said. Even those told that they're fit to play would still be allowed to bow out of Orlando, again, without pay for those eight regular-season games, sources said.

Those players deciding against the Orlando resumption wouldn't be paid for missed games, sources said. The league started withholding 25% of players' paychecks on June 15 because of the Force Majeure provision in the Collective Bargaining Agreement that will repay teams for cancelled games.

The NBA and NBPA have been working around-the-clock this week to finalize the terms of the restart, and hoped to have a term sheet and a health and safety protocol guide available to teams and players this week, sources said.