At least 10 referees are currently unavailable due to issues related to COVID-19, ESPN reported Monday.
Many of the absences are tied to contact tracing as opposed to positive tests, per the report, which adds that the NBA expects all officials presently sidelined to be available for the playoffs next month. Absences are creating more two-man referee crews, which could continue for the next several weeks.
“We at the NBA have taken a very strong stance, especially with referees traveling commercial, that we want referees and the teams that they are serving to be safe,” Monty McCutchen, the NBA’s vice president of referee development and training, told ESPN. “And so with an abundance of caution, we pull people out on contact tracing, if there’s even the smallest inkling (of an issue).”
McCutchen said the league has used its top six G League officials. Each of them had already been scheduled for some NBA games before the protocol pushed them into more games.
In the playoffs, an alternate official is assigned to each site in case of an injury or illness. –Field Level Media (@FieldLevelMedia)
The San Francisco Giants will look to further close the gap in their all-time rivalry with the visiting Oakland Athletics when they seek a second straight win Wednesday night in…
The Cleveland Guardians and Los Angeles Angels will play the third game of their four-game series Wednesday night in Anaheim, Calif., as the Guardians try to rediscover their offense. Cleveland’s…
The Los Angeles Kings are playoff-bound for the first time since the 2017-18 season. The Kings (43-27-10, 96 points) punched their postseason ticket Tuesday night when Dallas defeated Vegas in…
Guardians, slumping Franmil Reyes take on Shohei Ohtani’s Angels
Playoff-bound Kings seek to keep Kraken reeling
Six-man rotation kicks in as Astros, Cristian Javier face Rangers
Jason Robertson, Stars can lock up playoff berth vs. Coyotes