NBA sets draft date, firms up fall calendar

AP photo by Julio Cortez / A board displays the picks for the first round of the NBA draft on June 20, 2019, in New York.
AP photo by Julio Cortez / A board displays the picks for the first round of the NBA draft on June 20, 2019, in New York.

The NBA has firmed up its schedule for what will be a hectic time for teams this fall, deciding on Oct. 16 as the date for the 2020 draft and saying clubs can begin talking to free agents two days later.

The annual moratorium will begin at 12:01 a.m. EDT on Oct. 19 and continue through noon on Oct. 23, the league told teams on Saturday in a memo obtained by The Associated Press.

As was the case last season, teams and free agents can begin negotiating six hours before the moratorium, in this case 6 p.m. EDT on Oct. 18.

It could be a wildly busy few days in October for the NBA. If the schedule for the restarted 2019-20 season at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex at the Walt Disney World Resort near Orlando, Florida, goes as planned, Game 7 of the NBA Finals could be held Oct. 13, followed by the draft three days later and then free agency almost immediately after that.

By setting the draft date, the NBA also made Aug. 17 the early entry deadline and Oct. 6 the early entry withdrawal dates. It's unclear if that will change the schedule the NCAA laid out earlier this month, when it said college players would have "until 10 days after the NBA draft combine or Aug. 3, whichever comes first" to withdraw from the postponed draft and retain their eligibility.

photo AP photo by Jae C. Hong / NBA commissioner Adam Silver hopes to have a successful restart to the league's 2019-20 season next month in Florida.

The league also clarified the procedure for teams should any need arise to replace a player who either was excused from participating in the restart, would be protected from playing for health reasons or chose to not play.

Starting July 1 and going through the end of the seeding games, expected to be Aug. 14, substitute players can be signed to take the place of someone who falls into those categories. If a player tests positive for the novel coronavirus after the seeding games end, teams would still be allowed to replace them - but only with someone who has three years or less of NBA service.

And if a player - excluding "two-way players" who are under contract with NBA and G League teams - refuses to participate in games at Disney, he would lose about 1.1% of his salary for every game missed. That would be capped after 14 games, or roughly 15.1% of the player's contract. Players who are excused or protected from participating would not be subject to lost salary.

Teams will also be able to sign players to rest-of-season contracts, when eligible, starting Tuesday and continuing through June 30.

Tuesday is also the day the NBA enters the second phase of its health and safety protocol related to the resumption of the season. Among them is mandatory high-sensitivity coronavirus and antibody testing, with the virus test to be repeated every other day and the antibody test repeated only in the event of a positive virus test.

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