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No compulsory vaccine for NBA: Silver

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NBA commissioner Adam Silver says the league won't change it's logo to portray Kobe Bryant for now.
Camera IconNBA commissioner Adam Silver says the league won't change it's logo to portray Kobe Bryant for now.

NBA commissioner Adam Silver says the league won't require players to get the COVID-19 vaccine and that the logo is not changing despite a push for it to honour Kobe Bryant.

Silver made the comments during his annual, albeit virtual, All-Star weekend address from Atlanta.

Silver said no players have received the vaccine but he believes that most will when their turn comes. The league has said in the past it won't cut the line.

"My hunch is that most players ultimately will choose to get vaccinated," Silver said.

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"They have to make personal decisions at the end of the day -- and I take that very seriously, and I take concerns very seriously. But my sense is most will, ultimately, decide it is in their interest to get vaccinated."

Silver also pushed back on the charge, led by Kyrie Irving, to change the silhouette logo of - ostensibly - Jerry West to Kobe Bryant.

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"Nothing's permanently fixed. But the logo is iconic," Silver said. "Even changing the logo, purely even from a legal standpoint, isn't an easy exercise. Not that that should be the impediment ... it doesn't feel to me that this is the appropriate moment to be changing the logo.

"That doesn't mean, again, that we won't turn back and look at it at some point. To me, I appreciate the sentiments, but it feels like the logo is appropriate right now."

Silver said despite the fact the coronavirus is "in charge," he does not see the league instituting a playoff bubble this summer.

"We're not considering going back to a bubble right now," Silver said. "I don't rule anything out. ...The virus is firmly in charge, so we need to adjust to circumstances as they present themselves."

Further, Silver said he expects the 2021-22 season to go back to normal.

"I'm fairly optimistic at this point that we will be able to start on time, and that roughly half of our teams have fans in their arenas right now," Silver said.

"If vaccines continue on the pace they are, and they continue to be as effective as they have been against the virus and its variants, we're hopeful that we'll have relatively full arenas next season as well."

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