Reports: NBA tells teams it expects to have All-Star Game in Atlanta

Hawks' Trae Young and John Collins would be strong candidates to play in an All-Star Game in Atlanta.  Curtis Compton / ccompton@ajc.com

Credit: Curtis Compton

Credit: Curtis Compton

Hawks' Trae Young and John Collins would be strong candidates to play in an All-Star Game in Atlanta. Curtis Compton / ccompton@ajc.com

The NBA told its teams on Thursday night that it expects to finalize plans in the coming week to have an All-Star Game in Atlanta, the Associated Press and ESPN reported.

The game and skills competitions will be held on Sunday, March 7, the NBA told clubs in a memo, a copy of which was obtained by the AP. It remains unclear when players would have to report to Atlanta and how testing will work there, or if fans will be allowed in for the game.

It would be Atlanta’s third time playing host to the game, the others coming in 1978 and 2003.

The first-half schedule ends March 4, with the second half set to begin on March 11. The league said it expects to agree to terms with the National Basketball Players Association on testing protocols that will apply to all players during the break, how testing will work for the All-Star event, and when players will have to report back to their home markets to begin preparations for the second-half schedule.

ESPN first reported on the contents of the memo.

Daily testing, the NBA said, will continue during the break and the league expects that another condition will be that players won't be allowed to travel internationally. If a player leaves his home market during the midseason break, the NBA is expected to mandate that he stay in private accommodations.

All players will likely have to be back in home markets within two days of their teams resuming play, the NBA said.

Talks between the league and the NBPA have gone on for weeks about if and how to salvage the All-Star Game, which was originally scheduled to be played in Indianapolis this season — before the pandemic called off those plans. Among the ideas the league and the union are discussing: how the game can benefit both COVID-19 relief and historically Black colleges and universities.

Sacramento guard De’Aaron Fox said Wednesday night he thought the notion of an All-Star Game was “stupid” during a pandemic. Players have been told to wear masks on their benches, coaches must wear them at all times during games and the league and NBPA have installed strict protocols to try to get through the season safely.

“If I’m going to be brutally honest, I think it’s stupid,” Fox said. “If we have to wear masks and do all this for a regular game, then what’s the point of bringing an All-Star Game back? But obviously, money makes the world go ’round, so it is what it is.”

Fox was not among the top vote-getters in the first fan-balloting results released Thursday. Brooklyn’s Kevin Durant is the leading overall fan vote-getter so far with just over 2.3 million, the Los Angeles Lakers’ LeBron James has just under 2.3 million, and Golden State’s Stephen Curry has just over 2.1 million.

Cleveland is the 2022 host, Salt Lake City will host in 2023 and Indianapolis will get the event in 2024.