The threat of a global pandemic has meant a lot of people have gotten used to being under restrictive living situations. NBA players are not very different, spending much of the last few months in their homes or apartments, in some cases with their families. But ahead of the NBA’s restart in Orlando next month,…
While the United States continues to see a surge in coronavirus and in the state of Florida, the Republic of Disney continues to be moving forward with a plan to host the National Basketball Association and its players as they attempt to conclude the 2019-20 season beginning on July 30 with a night-game featuring the Los Angeles Lakers and the Los Angeles Clippers. And as part of the preparations at Walt Disney World, workers were spotted bringing in supersized beds measured to the needs of NBA players who will be on the campus.
The fine folks at MickeyBlog have photos of workers bringing in massive, custom-made beds to the Disney World Grand Floridian for NBA players to sleep in. Many hotels along the NBA circuit pride themselves on having these special accommodations for players. The Grand Floridian is where most teams are playing, whereas the Lakers are at the Gran Destino and the other teams invited to Disney but currently out of the playoff picture will be staying at the Yacht Club.
The state of Florida, where Disney World is located, totaled over 9,000 new cases of COVID-19 on Thursday.
Like all major leaguers, Washington Nationals first baseman Ryan Zimmerman has been waiting to see what would happen with baseball because of the coronavirus pandemic
Well, it is the Stanley Cup playoffs. So I guess you should expect a couple of overtimes.
The Great Hub City Series of 2020, the battle to co-host all of the games of COVID Cup, keeps getting extended.
We’re at the point now, however, where Edmonton has to be getting a complex.
At this point, you couldn’t be blamed for coming to the conclusion the NHL and NHL Players Association are trying to dodge the one location with the ultimate set-up in order to end up in a sexier city.
Let us review.
Las Vegas is a lock in the U.S. It’s Toronto, Edmonton or Vancouver as the Canadian city.
Hold it. Toronto is out. Their bid has fallen significantly short because they can’t match the safety bubble setups involving hotels and the arena that Vegas, Vancouver and Edmonton will be able to provide. It’s down to Edmonton or Vancouver in Canada to go with Vegas.
Hold it. Vancouver is out. Dr. Bonnie Henry has hit a snag when it comes to who is making the decisions on what happens to the other players on a team if someone tests positive during tournament play.
Hold it. Toronto has reshaped its bid by totally relocating its bubble away from the downtown arena and hotels to the Canadian National Exhibition grounds. It’s now down to Edmonton and Toronto.
Hold it … there’s still too much to get through here and the coronavirus numbers are going way up in Vegas. It’s going to overtime over the weekend, said NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly before heading to a New Jersey TV studio with commissioner Gary Bettman to conduct the NHL Draft Lottery.
So what’s this been like to be Oilers Entertainment Group vice-presidents Tim Shipton and Stuart Ballantyne, working their way through this putting all the pieces together, following the NHL wish lists to a T and offering everything Bettman and the league and players required and more?
And that’s complete with working out logical and reasoned logistics with Dr. Deena Hinshaw and her responsible Alberta health team?
I mean, what do they want?
They’re not on the phone asking if they can tweak this or tweak that? Just hold the phone, fellas.
Ballantyne and Shipton had nothing to say Friday and won’t until a decision has been made.
That Edmonton could finish third in this now dog and pony show is laughable.
Housing everybody at the CNE grounds in Toronto and commuting all 12 teams to Scotia Bank Arena for games and around the neighbourhood to practice ice is ludicrous in comparison to the Edmonton set-up.
In Edmonton, the players on all 12 teams would reside in the five-star J. W. Marriott hotel, secure in a bubble that includes an inordinate number of dressing rooms and a practice facility in Rogers Place, complete with a pedway between the hotel and arena.
Other people involved, staff, referees and TV people would be housed, in the first round, in the Delta and Sutton Place, a short walk away, with Edmonton police officers keeping them company to remain secure in the bubble.
I mean, compare the two.
If it’s just about hockey and life in the bubble, there’s no comparison.
How do you now come to the conclusion the league is hoping to trump the ideal set-up in Edmonton by bringing in a long list of other items into play?
• Sportsnet TV is based in Toronto. • Hockey Night In Canada is based in Toronto. • The NHL has offices in Toronto. • The NHL war room is in Toronto. • And don’t forget the Eastern Time zone.
It would be a lot easier to spread six televised games a day (even if start times are largely irrelevant with no fans in the stands) with one team in the Eastern Time zone and Vegas in the Pacific.
And it’s about Vegas.
Yes, the hotel room set up couldn’t be better anywhere else in the world. But has anybody noticed the coronavirus numbers since they reopened the casinos?
Oilers colour commentator Bob Stauffer has. He’s been keeping statistics on all this back to when the hub cities concept began.
Las Vegas has 12,204 cases (2,754 in the last week.)
Edmonton’s has had 925 total.
Vegas has 408 deaths to Edmonton’s 15 — only three in the last 56 days.
Nevada has 118 in intensive care compared to eight in Alberta and only two of them in Edmonton.
Vegas and Toronto?
If that’s how it ends up, the NHL will clearly have followed the NBA, locating to ESPN’s centre at Disney World in COVID-19 out-of-control Florida, into losing total focus on the main aim here.
If it’s all about player safety — and it should be — if the NHL loses Edmonton as a hub city, the NHL loses.
If it means the opportunity to play games on familiar turf — and out of the disaster that is Florida — Blue Jays president Mark Shapiro said his team is willing to go above and beyond the strictest of safety guidelines to make it happen. Read More
If it means the opportunity to play games on familiar turf — and out of the disaster that is Florida — Blue Jays president Mark Shapiro said his team is willing to go above and beyond the strictest of safety guidelines to make it happen.
Now comes the challenge of convincing layers of health and government officials in Canada that blockades should be removed for a team that has had an undisclosed number of players and staff record positive tests for the COVID-19 virus this week in Florida.
Despite having to ready 60 players and a coaching staff for a training camp due to begin in less than a week, the Jays are still a team with no fixed address. While the other 29 Major League Baseball teams prepare to go back to work at their home stadiums, the Jays first need to get government and health clearance to set up shop here.
Either that or roll the pandemic dice and get to work in Dunedin, Fla., now that Shapiro said the club has ruled out all other options.
“There is more comfort coming to Toronto and conducting training camp here under the conditions and circumstances here,” Shapiro said on a Friday conference call with baseball reporters. “But if we have to do it in Florida, we will do so with diligence and detail and do our best to keep players out of harm’s way.”
As the Florida numbers have spiked alarmingly over the past week, Shapiro and the Jays have stepped up lobbying efforts with health officials from the federal, provincial and municipal levels.
Shapiro certainly isn’t about to disclose the details of those talks — or even the prospects of success — but did say that the Jays are willing to go above and beyond the exhaustive 100-plus page safety protocol manual issued by MLB.
That would include creating “a modified quarantine for our players and if we move to a regular-season scenario for visiting players,” Shapiro said. “That would be in addition to the MLB protocol.”
While safety is paramount, time is also of the essence for the Jays. Players have been told to be ready to ship north, but not to go so far as make actual travel plans until the team can make an actual decision. The mess puts the Jays in a situation unlike any other team and at a possible competitive disadvantage.
“A deadline does not exist formally,” Shapiro said. “We have to deal with the reality that we have logistical issues that we have 60 players and staff to transport. If we delay a decision too long, there are implications in our readiness and competitiveness. We are working on an accelerated time frame and we need to make a decision very soon.”
Shapiro said the team isn’t seeking “extreme special treatment” from Canadian governments and health authorities and that the team is “understanding and deferential to public health and safety” concerns.
That said, he acknowledged that Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Toronto mayor John Tory have been open to discussing the Rogers Centre option.
“Their guidance and support has been very strong throughout the entire time I’ve been talking,” Shapiro said. “It’s been encouraging.”
So where does that leave the Jays as the scheduled return to work is measured in days and plans to relocate can be counted in hours? On a Zoom call with general manager Ross Atkins on Thursday, players were apprised of the alternatives and told to “hang tight.”
Shapiro said the team has ruled out Buffalo, home of the team’s triple-A affiliate, as well as sharing Tropicana Field with the Rays. Best case, the Jays get clearance to have both training camp and regular-season home games at the Rogers Centre. Second best — and perhaps the most realistic — is to be forced to begin training camp in Dunedin before shifting north at some point.
The Florida problem is an admitted concern, however.
Though Shapiro would offer no details on the players and staff who tested positive for COVID-19 this week beyond stating they were the result of community spread. The Jays CEO knows more bad news is likely on the way.
“We expect a lot of positives tests,” Shapiro said. “Any time you do comprehensive tests, the numbers go up. We are testing every single person at intake. That’s going to be part of the transition process into creating the closed environment as much as possible around our players.”
As foreboding as that may sound — and certainly a point of discussion regarding the lobby for possible border crossing — Shapiro is confident that the young Jays team will be diligent in staying safe.
“It’s encouraging to hear both our players and our staff express their understanding that their ability to stay healthy is going to be key to their success,” Shapiro said. “No one wants to have to sit out and not play.
“I think it will be very important for it to be a collaborative effort that will take a partnership between us and the players. There are many things within our control that enable us to stay healthy. The players are going to be constantly educated on that and provided protection wherever possible.”
At this point, wherever is most definitely the operative word.
The NBA and the National Basketball Players Association announced that they have finalized a comprehensive plan for a July 30th restart to the 2019-2020 season. This comprehensive plan includes stringent health and safety protocols, a single-site campus at Walt Disney World Resort in Florida and the goal of taking collective action to combat racism and […]
NEW YORK — Sixteen NBA players tested positive for COVID-19, the league said on Friday, a little over a month before the 2020 season is set to resume. “Any player who tested positive will remain in self-isolation until he satisfies public health protocols for discontinuing isolation and has been cleared by a physician,” the National […]
Editor’s note: This is the Thursday, June 25 edition of the Purple & Bold Lakers newsletter. To receive the newsletter in your inbox, sign up here. How many is too many? It’s a difficult question that, unfortunately for the NBA, has many permutations as the league attempts to get its July 30 restart off the…
One of the primary questions surrounding the NBA’s plan to resume the season at Disney World in Orlando has been the integrity of the bubble it plans to set up. How will players be protected from the virus? How will unauthorized personnel be kept out? On Thursday, a report from ESPN’s Tim Bontemps answered that question, but in a controversial fashion.
According to Bontemps, the NBA will use local, state and federal law enforcement as added security at Disney. They will join typical venue and team security staff in Orlando, and there will not be law enforcement on the campus itself. Their role will include, but not be limited to, the following:
Florida Highway Patrol officers will escort team buses to and from arenas.
Orange and Osceola County sheriff’s offices will have a presence at team hotels and arenas.
The Department of Homeland Security, in addition to Disney and the NBA itself, will monitor social media for threats.
Security will also be responsible for maintaining a closed perimeter around the campus. However, it is unclear whether those responsibilities will fall to team personnel or law enforcement.
NBA players have actively taken part in protests against police brutality since the death of George Floyd at the hands of the Minneapolis police. NBPA executive director Michele Roberts expressed concern over the idea of such extreme security measures in May. “Are we going to arm guards around the hotel?” Roberts asked ESPN’s Ramona Shelburne in May. “That sounds like incarceration to me.”
The NBA shared its security plan with players on Thursday, according to Bontemps. No players have yet commented publicly, and no reporting details concerns from players about the involvement of law enforcement. Considering the social environment in the country right now, though, some apprehension is a near certainty.
Some people in the Los Angeles Dodgers and Minnesota Twins organizations have tested positive for COVID-19, officials with the teams said Thursday. Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said on a video conference call that it’s “a delicate subject” and he declined to identify those with positive tests. “We have had some people in […]
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KTXL) — Four Sacramento Kings players, including forward Jabari Parker, have tested positive for COVID-19, a source within the team has confirmed. In a release sent by the team Wednesday, Parker said “several days” prior he tested positive for the virus and has self-isolated in Chicago. Parker is a Chicago native. “I am […]