When the NBA season went on hiatus in March of 2020, there was no guarantee that the season could be finished in any meaningful way with the spike in cases of COVID-19 throughout the nation. As a brand, the NBA had to balance the responsibility to health concerns as well as its desire to crown a champion and keep its many employees (not just the players or coaches, but the staff at arenas and so on) from losing their livelihood. The compromise solution turned out to be a "bubble" in which teams and media could live on the ground of Disney World in Florida, playing out the rest of their season as almost prisoners at the Happiest Place on Earth. To say that it was a surreal scenario would be an understatement.
Ben Golliver of the Washington Post was one of the media members allowed on "campus" at Disney World, and one of the few to go the distance for what ended up being 93 days on the job, covering all aspects not just of the basketball on the court but the social justice movements that sprang up in response to the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and other Black Americans at the hands of law enforcement. Add in the pressure of trying not to contaminate the bubble with a positive COVID test, and the pressures on the teams and those around them were enormous. And yet, somehow the NBA was able to make it all work. "Bubbleball" is as inside a chronicle of that weird season as any you'll find, and while it might seem too soon to look back at the event, it's nonetheless a great eyewitness account of how the players and media members responded to the conditions imposed on them by a global pandemic and a reckoning with America's long history of racial injustice.
Golliver traces the peculiar conditions of being in the bubble, the threat of boredom and the quest for something to keep the mind distracted, and he also shows how the bubble was a positive experience for social justice movements in that, with the players all in one place and (mostly) all of one voice, they could amplify their dismay, disgust, and outrage at the murders taking place with a megaphone that might have been easier for the world at large to ignore if they were dispersed throughout the country. A writer who's covered the NBA for over a decade, Golliver knows how to get to the heart of the story, providing illuminating profiles in miniature of the players who made an impact during the bubble run (from the usual suspects in superstars like LeBron James, Kawhi Leonard, and Jimmy Butler, to the lesser-known but important figures in both basketball and social justice movements). Balancing the on-the-court access with the behind-the-scenes drama, and capturing the odd atmosphere of playing in a virtually empty arena far from home, Golliver brings to life the hardships and hard-fought-for moments of playing your sport in circumstances unprecedented in history.
For now, it seems that we're potentially turning a corner from the impact that COVID-19 has wrought, and we may never need to retreat to bubbles to ensure the safety of ourselves and others. But it could just as easily be that another wave of this pandemic, or a new one not yet dreamed up by all the most professional risk-assessment experts the world over, could strike again in our lifetime. For the moment that the NBA got together to play and to protest, "Bubbleball" is a great documentation of what we can only hope is a once-in-a-lifetime set of circumstances.