The NBA might be returning this summer — in Disney World

The NBA might be returning this summer — in Disney World

Miami Heat fan Ricardo Ballester cheers on his team against the New Jersey Nets during the 2006 NBA playoffs in Miami. | Eliot J. Schechter/Getty Images

The league hopes to create a “bubble” in Florida for players, coaches, and staff.

The NBA — among the first professional sports leagues in the US to suspend play due to the coronavirus pandemic — is looking to relaunch its season in late July at Walt Disney World’s ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex near Orlando, according to a statement from Mike Bass, the league’s chief communications officer.

No agreement has yet been struck. But the plan would essentially move basketball to the Disney complex— a 255-acre campus with arenas and ample hotel space — on a full-time basis, with players and staff living, practicing, and playing there. Fans would not be permitted to attend games.

The NBA suddenly suspended its season March 11, after Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert tested positive for Covid-19 — a move that sent a nationwide signal to Americans about the seriousness of the virus.

Since then, at least 10 NBA players and multiple members of team staff have tested positive for the virus, and the mother of one prominent player, Minnesota Timberwolves center Karl-Anthony Towns, passed away from Covid-19.

But after more than two months without NBA basketball, one of the world’s most popular sports leagues, one idea gained traction: What about keeping players, coaches, and staff in a single location, testing them regularly, and permitting them to practice and play in a quarantine “bubble” of sorts? The NBA appears to be seriously considering it — with Disney World as the location of the bubble.

Basketball fans want the sport to return — and so do players

While millions of Americans and television executives have eagerly awaited the return of live team sports, sporting events offer specific challenges to stopping the spread of the coronavirus, among spectators as well as among players and staff. Basketball requires close physical proximity and contact — across the country, basketball hoops have been removed from parks and playgrounds to prevent people from playing.

Still, the NBA has been taking steps to prepare for a season relaunch. The league allowed voluntary practices with four or fewer players present to resume on May 8, with Covid-19 testing provided to players and staff in locations where that’s possible. As of May 8, that included the Los Angeles Lakers, the Los Angeles Clippers, and the Orlando Magic.

If the season did not restart this year, players would stand to lose roughly $850 million in gross pay. According to results sent to NBA agents and others, a recent poll performed by the NBA Players Association found that most NBA players wanted to play again, even in empty facilities.

Polling conducted by Morning Consult indicates that fans are ready to get back to watching sports, too — even if they aren’t permitted to attend. 41% of those polled from May 19-21 said that they wanted leagues to start playing sports again, empty venues or no. That’s an increase from just 16% of those polled in early April.

In an interview with ESPN, National Basketball Players Association executive director Michele Roberts said that players were ready to finish the season. “It’s time. It’s time,” she said. “It’s been two-and-a-half months of, ‘What if?’ My players need some level of certainty. I think everybody does.” (I reached out to the NBA Coaches Association (NBCA) to find out how coaches in the league viewed the NBA’s new plans. I will update if and when I hear back.)

A lot of plans for the return of sports have centered on creating a “bubble” of sorts, where players, coaches and staff would live, practice and play games, quarantined from the outside world and with frequent temperature checks and tests for coronavirus. And for the NBA, Disney World might make an ideal staging area.

Disney World could become the NBA’s new bubble

Florida launched phase 1 of its reopening plan last week, with some restaurants, gyms and hair salons permitted to open with limited capacity. And the state has prominently pitched itself to professional sports leagues and teams across the country as a safe place to relaunch.

“We want to have you here,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis told reporters, meaning professional sorts teams. “We want to have basketball practicing again, we would love to have Major League Baseball.”

He later added: “What I would tell commissioners of the leagues is, if you have a team in an area where they just won’t let them operate, we’ll find a place for you here in the state of Florida, because we think it’s important, and we know that it can be done safely.”

As Yahoo! Sports Keith Smith detailed, the Disney complex offers abundant hotel space and basketball facilities, and perhaps more importantly, as private property Disney could block off roads and access into the complex so that NBA players and staff could stay quarantined.

And from Disney’s perspective, the potential value of the NBA playing exclusively on its property is incalculable. Disney owns ESPN, which in turn broadcasts hundreds of NBA games each year (a deal worth a little over $2.6 billion yearly). And the company has been hit hard financially by the coronavirus pandemic, with parks shut down by the pandemic and even ESPN losing money with few live sports to broadcast. As a former Disney executive told The Athletic’s Joe Vardon, an NBA presence in Disney World could be a much needed boon to Disney — and ESPN’s — profits, encouraging visitors to return to the amusement park when possible.

“Right now that message is so important, one in our culture, two as it relates to sports being a place that people can go back to and feel safe. I think it’s a very powerful message. It says, ‘Wow, the NBA guys who are worth tens of millions of dollars and the owners are worth billions and billions of dollars, have felt like this is a safe place to put their athletes.’”

But there are lots of questions left for the NBA, Disney, and the NBA Players Association to answer. Which teams would go to Disney World? Would the NBA season begin where it left off, or will teams move on to the playoffs? Would players be quarantined for two weeks upon arriving at Disney World? What about players’ families?

And if this works (leaving aside what “works” even means for a potentially truncated NBA season held in, essentially, a sports theme park), what does it mean for other sports, especially those with larger staff and bigger teams, like football?


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Author: Jane Coaston

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