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CP3: Players need at least 3-4 weeks’ prep time

Should the NBA set a plan in place to restart in the coming months, it will need to include a runway of “at least” three or four weeks for players to prepare to play games, Oklahoma City Thunder guard Chris Paul said Wednesday.

“I’m just letting you know, and I don’t think the league would do it anyway, but if they were like, ‘Hey, you got two weeks and then we’re going,’ that’s not going to happen,” Paul, who is serving his seventh year as NBPA president, said via a conference call. “That’s not going to happen. Whatever the amount of time is, just know that players will have the input, they say-so, because we’re the ones playing. That comes first. We don’t ever want to put guys in a situation where their injury risk is higher than ever before.”

Since the league was suspended on March 11 following Rudy Gobert‘s positive COVID-19 test, many players haven’t had any access to training facilities or even basketball goals. Paul said he hasn’t shot in an actual basketball gym since the layup lines prior to the game against the Jazz on March 11.

Charlotte Hornets coach James Borrego told reporters Wednesday that he thinks players would need “multiple weeks” to get back into basketball shape for game action. He noted that unlike in previous work stoppages, like in a lockout season, players aren’t playing regular 5-on-5 against anyone.

ESPN’s Brian Windhorst reported last week there’s a 25-day program that has been proposed where players would go through 11 days of individual workouts that would include a measure of social distancing, and then if permitted by medical officials, a two-week formal training camp.

“I get what we’re dealing with right now, a lot of hypotheticals, but I don’t know,” Paul said when asked how long players would need to get back in basketball shape. “This is the thing with having 450 players in the league and being in a situation like this where some guys have access to weight rooms, some guys don’t. Some guys have access to facilities where they can train, or do this, or can run. That’s why, whatever happens, and I say this and I mean this, we always goes back to the players.”

Paul was careful not to discuss hypothetical situations at length, like what a return may look like in a possible quarantine “bubble,” or if he’d be good with just going straight to the playoffs with no regular-season games.

“We just want to play,” Paul said. “We’re trying to figure out what that looks like. Right now I’m just focused on playing. Playing in some form or fashion.”

“This is a situation where no one knows. The virus is actually in complete control. I seriously tried to answer things the best I could, but there are things where, it’s not like I’ve got the answers and I’m just not telling you.”

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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