• Loading stock data...
Sunday, November 9, 2025
Tune in Nov. 12 at 1 p.m. ET for Future of Sports: Stadium Sophistication. Register now

Warriors Present Plan to Have Fans at 50% Capacity Next Season

  • The team could spend around $30 million to test everyone who enters Chase Center.
  • Owner Joe Lacob wants to set a standard for the sports world.
Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

The Golden State Warriors have presented a plan to state and local officials to reopen Chase Center to fans at 50% capacity for the 2020-21 NBA season, ESPN reported. 

Owner Joe Lacob said the team could spend upward of $30 million to test “every fan, Warriors employee and player with the most accurate form of COVID-19 testing for each home game or day they come to Chase Center.”

Lacob, who has a master’s degree in public health, believes the team’s plan could serve as a template for all sports franchises and entertainment venues looking to bring back fans amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I not only want to get this done and show the world how we can do it now, I’m willing to spend the money to do it,” Lacob told ESPN.  “This is a serious, serious problem. It cannot go on for multiple years … because if this were to go on for several years, the NBA is no more.”

The Warriors’ plan, internally referred to as “Operation DubNation,” has been in the works since the NBA first shut down in March. 

It entails the use of rapid PCR tests or “equivalent amplification technologies” that can detect traces of the virus in nasal or throat swabs within 15 minutes — and are more accurate than rapid antigen tests. PCR tests are said to be close to 99% accurate and can even detect the virus before it becomes infectious, whereas rapid antigen tests — which are what the White House has been using — could miss a significant portion of people who could be infectious. 

The PCR tests, however, are considerably more expensive than rapid antigen tests, and less readily available. But Mesa Biotech, Visby and CUEHealth have recently earned FDA approval to manufacture the tests and are “ramping up in volume of production,” according to ESPN. 

Fans would get tested at the Chase Center or at other drive-up locations around the Bay Area within 48 hours of the game they planned to attend. The team has partnered with CLEAR, the company that uses technology to identify pre-approved air travelers, to “link test results to the ticket holder on a mobile device.”

Everyone entering Chase Center would also wear a mask and maintain social distance. The Warriors would install a state-of-the-art air filtration system capable of purging 100% of the Chase Center’s air supply and replacing it with 100% outside air up to four times per hour. 

“The White House used less sensitive tests, meaning that they’re going to have more false negatives,” Dr. George Rutherford, a professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at UCSF who has reviewed the Warriors’ plans, told ESPN. “The Warriors are planning on using the most accurate, most sensitive tests we have, and that’s a big difference. I don’t think anybody else could do anything more than they’ve done. This is as close to making it as close to perfect a plan as I’ve seen for anything reopening.”

On Nov. 11, the NBA sent teams a memo with guidelines for potentially having fans in arenas next season — only some areas of the country are currently allowing fans to attend sporting events. Those guidelines require testing of fans seated within 30 feet of the court, with the testing occuring no more than two days before the game.

California has yet to approve fans to be at indoor events, and restrictions are tightening further in San Francisco after a rise in cases locally and throughout the state. The Los Angeles Lakers have already said that 2020-21 season games at Staples Center will be held without fans until further notice.

But without in-person fans, the NBA has told teams it is facing a projected 40% loss of revenue, or around $4 billion. Lacob said his plan “is not the Warriors just trying to make more money,” but rather, he’s trying to establish a standard for the sports world.

“You cannot sustain this league with no fans. You can do it for a year. We’ll all get by for a year. But suppose we’re in this situation next year. Now we’re talking some serious, serious financial damage to a lot of people,” Lacob said. “There’s so many reasons why we have to figure out ways, short of the vaccine being a cure-all, to allow people to get back to work, allow people to work at our venues. There’s thousands of people, 500 Warrior employees and 1,500 on a game day, but beyond that, there’s all the vendors. There’s so many people that are relying on this and don’t have jobs.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

TUCSON, ARIZ. -- Resurfacing and painting of the new floor at McKale Center.

The Business of College Basketball’s Signature Courts

Signature floors are a creative—and increasingly expensive—corner of college sports.
Nneka Ogwumike

Project B Basketball League Says It Has No Saudi Funding

The upstart won’t disclose how much money it has raised.
Aug 31, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; Golden State Valkyries guard Kaitlyn Chen (2) holds a ball as the WNBA logo appears on the ball and shorts before the game against the Indiana Fever at Chase Center
exclusive

Zora Stephenson Is Lead Candidate to Call 2026 NBC WNBA Finals

Next year, NBC will air its first WNBA Finals since 2002.

Featured Today

Aug 6, 2025; Sandy, UT, USA; Queretaro defender Edson Partida (22) watches the ball during the second half of the game against Real Salt Lake at America First Field

Mexican Soccer Is the Next Frontier for American Investors

Liga MX is an appealing proposition with big potential upside.
G League
November 6, 2025

Is College Basketball About to Raid the G League?

Two G Leaguers have gone back to college. More could follow.
Oct 11, 2025; University Park, Pennsylvania, USA; Penn State Nittany Lions head coach James Franklin stands on the field following the game against the Northwestern Wildcats at Beaver Stadium
November 1, 2025

College Football’s Coach Buyout Bonanza: All Your Questions Answered

Schools owe their fired coaches millions in buyouts—and it isn’t over.
Oct 13, 2024; Chicago, IL, USA; Susanna Sullivan of the United States of America finishes seventh in the Chicago Marathon at Grant Park
October 31, 2025

More Races, More Money: The New Calculus for Pro Marathoners

More races per year mean more money—but the math isn’t simple.
Sponsored

How HOKA is Reimagining the NIL Relationship

TNT Sports is going all-in on college athletics—bringing fans closer and giving brands a powerful new way to connect.
Sponsored

Game the Green: Transforming Fan Experiences at TPC Sawgrass

As fans gather at THE PLAYERS Championship, Comcast Business will be keeping spectators and the PGA TOUR connected like never before.
Sponsored

How HOKA is Reimagining the NIL Relationship

Fans can now follow their favorite golfers and experience every marquee moment at the Ryder Cup — thanks to innovation from T-Mobile.
Sponsored

How HOKA is Reimagining the NIL Relationship

On Location is redefining the Olympic experience by creating lasting connections beyond the Games.
February 3, 2025

Super Bowl Ticket Prices Crash As Hotel Rooms See Historic Rate Hike

Prices sink by about 30%, due in part to a lodging crunch.
Sponsored

How Sportradar and the NBA Are Shaping the Future of Immersive Fan..

By transforming raw data into tailored, interactive content, Sportradar helps turn the NBA’s enormous fanbase into active participants.
October 8, 2024

NBA GMs Rank Salary-Cap Apron As Rule That Needs to Change Most

Schedule changes finished second with 17% of the vote.
Sponsored

Trend Report: Chiefs-Chargers, Tobacco Road Rivalry, Nebraska Sellout Streak

According to data from TickPick, some games this week will prove to be wallet-busters, climbing into the four figures.