Golden State Warriors forward Andrew Wiggins has said he felt like he had no choice but to get the Covid-19 vaccine.
Wiggins told NBC Sports in March he wasn’t getting vaccinated unless he was forced to. He applied for a religious exemption, but the NBA denied that request in September.
However, Warriors head coach Steve Kerr confirmed on Sunday that Wiggins had received the vaccine. And speaking for the first time since getting vaccinated, the Canadian basketball player said he felt like he had to do so to be able to play for his team.
“I feel like the only options [were] to get vaccinated or not play in the NBA,” Wiggins said after the Warriors’ 121-107 preseason opener win at the Portland Trail Blazers on Tuesday (AEDT).
“It was a tough decision. Hopefully, it works out in the long run and in 10 years I’m still healthy.”
In September, the NBA warned the Warriors along with the New York Knicks and Brooklyn Nets that new Covid-19 policies set by local governments will prohibit any unvaccinated player from playing in home games in New York City and San Francisco.
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And though 90 percent of the league is vaccinated, according to a CNN source, there are still a few holdouts — and it could cost them.
The NBA announced in September that unvaccinated players who do not comply with local vaccination mandates will not be paid for the games they miss.
“It feels good to play, but getting vaccinated, that’s going to be something that stays in my mind for a long time,” he said.
“It’s not something I wanted to do, but kind of forced to.”
The NBA pointed out that it was local San Francisco mandate requiring players to be vaccinated in order to play games in indoor stadiums in the city.
Wiggins, who received the one-dose Johnson & Johnson shot, said he doesn’t hold anything against the team.
“They didn’t make the rule. But I guess to do certain stuff, to work, I guess you don’t own your body. That’s what it comes down to. If you want to work in society today, then I guess they made the rules of what goes in your body and what you do.
“Hopefully, there’s a lot of people out there that are stronger than me and keep fighting, stand for what they believe, and hopefully, it works out for them.”
Last week at Warriors’ media day, when asked about his stance on vaccinations, the 26-year-old said he was going to “keep fighting for what I believe and for what I believe is right … What’s right to one person isn’t right to the other and vice versa.”
Wiggins also said that no one in his family is vaccinated.
“It’s not really something we believe in as a family,” he said. “They know that I had to. It came down to get the vaccination or don’t play basketball. I’m 26. I have two kids. I want more kids.
“I’m trying to do something that will generate as much money as I can for my kids and my future kids, trying to make generational wealth. So, I took the gamble, took the risk, and hopefully, like I said, I’m good.”
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