At one point last week, nearly one-third of the NBA was
sidelined due to the league’s health and safety protocols. By the
end of December, 247 players had been in the protocols at one point
or another. It felt like a new athlete was being ruled out every
few minutes, and teams scrambled to find replacement
players via 10-day contracts and hardship exemptions.
The on-court product suffered, and there was a lot of talk about
whether the NBA should pause the season. While NBA commissioner
Adam Silver shot down that idea, the league did ultimately adjust their
protocols.
Now, players who are vaccinated and asymptomatic can return to
action five days after a positive COVID-19 test as long as their
cycle-threshold level is above 30; previously, players had to sit
out seven days and their CT level had to be above 35 to return.
These changes have drastically reduced the number of players who
are in the NBA’s health and safety protocols at any given time.
Today, there are only 47 players who are sidelined as a result
of the protocols (as noted by HoopsHype’s Alberto de Roa). That’s a
fraction of the absences we saw last month. Under the new rules,
the NBA hasn’t had to postpone any games either (after postponing
11 contests in December).
With that said, some teams are still dealing with outbreaks. For
example, the Indiana Pacers have had nine players and one assistant
coach in the protocols over the last 48 hours: Malcolm Brogdon,
Caris LeVert, Chris Duarte, T.J. Warren, Jeremy Lamb, Torrey Craig,
Justin Anderson, Goga Bitadze, Isaiah Jackson and assistant coach
Lloyd Pierce. (However, Brogdon, Duarte, Lamb and Pierce were able
to exit the protocols and rejoin the team on Friday).
Still, it seems that the NBA’s altered protocols have largely
been effective as cases spike across the country due to the Omicron
variant. After COVID-19 ravaged rosters in recent weeks, perhaps
the worst is behind us and the NBA has made it through the toughest
stretch of the season.