There seem to be fewer players fishing at Walt Disney World these days. Getting a tee time or streaming video games might not be as much of a priority as it was a few weeks ago, either.
Summer vacation is over.
The restart gets real now.
The NBA playoffs start Monday, the beginning of a two-month journey to see which team will be able to say it won a championship. It would come in the most unusual, most trying season the league has ever seen because of a shutdown caused by the coronavirus pandemic and 22 teams eventually moving into a so-called bubble at the Disney complex in Lake Buena Vista, Fla., to salvage the season.
"This is why we got here, why we worked so hard, why everyone put their egos aside and put their effort into this, so we could get to that point where we could crown a champion," said guard Kyle Lowry of the defending champion Toronto Raptors. "The best part of the NBA season is the playoffs."
The Raptors are back, with realistic aspirations to repeat their title. The Eastern Conference field also includes the Milwaukee Bucks, who posted the best regular-season record for the second consecutive year and have a likely back-to-back MVP in Giannis Antetokounmpo.
In the Western Conference, for the first time since 2015, the Golden State Warriors won't be going to the NBA Finals — their gap year, so to speak, meant they fell to the bottom of the West as they look to reset with a healthy Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson next season, possibly with the No. 1 overall draft pick as well.
LeBron James is back in the playoffs, after taking the Los Angeles Lakers — who couldn't get to the postseason in his injury-marred first year in Hollywood — to the best record in the West. He's gone to the NBA Finals in each of his last eight postseason trips; four with Miami, then four more with Cleveland.
"We've been through a lot this year," Lakers coach Frank Vogel told reporters last week. "But really, all of it is just a buildup to us ... going into the playoffs. So we're here, we're excited about it and confident in what we can accomplish."
The matchups: Milwaukee-Orlando, Toronto-Brooklyn, Boston-Philadelphia and Indiana-Miami in the East, with the Lakers against play-in game winner Portland, the Los Angeles Clippers against Dallas, Denver-Utah and Houston-Oklahoma City.
Some of those clubs can say they are happy to be in the postseason. For others, only a title will do.
"I didn't mention that we secured the 2 seed," Clippers coach Doc Rivers said. "I don't think anybody in the locker room talked about it. We really don't care. Like, we want to win it all. ... That's the only thing that matters right now for us."
Teams have been in the bubble for nearly six weeks now, first for a couple of weeks of training camp, then three scrimmages followed by eight seeding games that were critical to some clubs and little more than tuneups to others.
It'll be 16 teams, with games limited to two arenas at Disney. For the first round, it'll be four games per day at each site, meaning drama will begin in the early afternoon and continue until late in the evening.
Outside the Disney gates, the coronavirus pandemic continues. But inside the bubble, daily testing is working and the value of the strict protocols has been proven. No players inside have had a confirmed positive test.
"Two months ago, it didn't really look like this was a realistic opportunity," Miami coach Erik Spoelstra said. "You just see what's going on around the world. ... Not everybody has been given this opportunity to continue to do what you love. We have and we want to take advantage of it."
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August 17, 2020 at 09:27AM
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It's the best time of a year cut short - Albany Times Union
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