Mental health 'critical' to avoiding bubble trouble


Teams prioritize keeping players on even keel for NBA's isolated restart
Jrue Holiday expects basketball to be the easy part.
The Pelicans guard will be living in the NBA's "bubble" when 22 teams gather near Orlando, Florida, this month to resume their suspended season.
Holiday's wife, Lauren, a former US national team soccer player, is pregnant with the couple's second child at a time when much of society has been shut down by the coronavirus pandemic. The veteran New Orleans player might be away from home for more than a month.
Meanwhile, Memphis rookie Ja Morant expects to miss his daughter's first birthday next month. Boston's Gordon Hayward may leave the team when his fourth child is born in September. And players like Washington's Bradley Beal and Portland's Damian Lillard wonder how intense NBA restrictions on player movement will be received.
These are but a few examples of why the NBA, its teams and the players' union are making mental health and wellness resources available to players now and whenever they arrive at Disney's Wide World of Sports complex.
"It is going to leave the guys with a lot of time on their own, and challenges with families, newborns and whatever else they have going on in their personal lives are going to be magnified because they're going to be in confined spaces for prolonged periods of time," said William Parham, a Loyola Marymount psychology professor and director of the National Basketball Players Association's mental health and wellness program.
"There's no way around it, so I would anticipate some increased anxiety, some increased tension, some increased restlessness."
There will be no fans at Disney. There also will be restrictions on where players can go, plus rules keeping families away until at least the second round of the playoffs. The hope is to significantly limit exposure to COVID-19 inside the bubble.
Even under normal circumstances, Holiday sees family time as a cherished respite. Life at Disney will clearly complicate that.
"This is one of the mental parts about it that guys have to adjust to, where someone like me, I go home and it's where I kind of relax," Holiday said. "I try my best not to bring my work home with me so I can hang out with my wife, my dog, and my daughter and I can do things like that.... I think that's going to be a little bit of a challenge, especially after like seven to 10 days."
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