The Celtics’ total of 32 players who were under contract - some very briefly - at some point this season was the highest in the NBA, one more than Portland and two more than Indiana, Milwaukee, and New Orleans.
To put how many players were needed in some perspective, consider that over a five-season span - 1982-83 through 1986-87 - the Celtics used a total of 27 players.Īnd that doesn’t count four Celtics who were signed and never got into a game. You have had guys go out for real reasons. You have guys go out for false positives. “I don’t want to just talk about the injuries but COVID protocols. “Strangest season I’ve been a part of so far,” 19-year NBA veteran LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers said during the season. There were 633 players who were known to be under contract at some point, up 15% from last season’s figure.Īnd when the variant was at its worst, the league was at its busiest: over a 10-day span of late December, 93 different 10-day contracts were signed.
“So, without those players, we wouldn’t be here today.”Īround the league, 605 players - a record - got into at least one game during the regular season, up 12% from last season. “I think that everyone understood that if we did have to pause the season, it would have a huge potential economic impact on the league as well or force players and the league to have to move into the summer, which is not ideal,” Silver told The Associated Press. And they’re really why the NBA Finals matchup between the Boston Celtics and Golden State Warriors is being played exactly as planned when the schedule was being put together last summer. Those fill-ins kept the season from veering off the rails. It could be argued the untold MVP's of this season were the more than 100 players signed to short-term hardship contracts to fill in when almost every team was decimated by the Omicron variant and other virus issues in December and January. With a lot of help from dozens of newly signed players, some of whom might already be forgotten, the NBA played on.