FILE - In this March 3, 2020, file photo, Boston Celtics guard Marcus Smart (36) reacts to a call during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Brooklyn Nets in Boston. Celtics guard Marcus Smart says he has been cleared by medical officials after testing positive for the new coronavirus earlier this month. In a message posted late Sunday, March 29, 2020, on Twitter, Smart says he was informed of the news Friday by the Massachusetts Department of Health. He thanked...
FILE - In this March 3, 2020, file photo, Boston Celtics guard Marcus Smart (36) reacts to a call during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Brooklyn Nets in Boston. Celtics guard Marcus Smart says he has been cleared by medical officials after testing positive for the new coronavirus earlier this month. In a message posted late Sunday, March 29, 2020, on Twitter, Smart says he was informed of the news Friday by the Massachusetts Department of Health. He thanked... Credit: Mary Schwalm

In and around the NBA, there’s enthusiasm to pick up a basketball and move toward the conclusion of the 2019-20 season — a conclusion that could settle debates about the Lakers and the Clippers, about LeBron James and Giannis Antetokounmpo, about the long-term feasibility of the Philadelphia 76ers and the promise of the Boston Celtics.

Inside of front offices, there’s enthusiasm to find out what’s next — to know when the season will restart, how the league will make it work. What about the draft? What about free agency? What about the salary cap?

Players, coaches, front office personnel and employees all want answers. But conversations with people with knowledge of the NBA’s plans all point in one direction — no one knows what’s next and when “next” will happen.

That ball that everyone wants to pick up? It doesn’t even have air in it yet — the country still fighting the COVID-19 pandemic that’s shut down all but the most essential businesses. It’s why the league remains in a holding pattern — planning for a reboot it knows might not come this year.

It’s why specifics are in high demand and short supply.

“I haven’t come to a point where I have a point of like no return, or a point where, ‘OK, this is the final straw. Tell us something now,’ ” James said. “We’re just taking it day by day, especially here in our household. Obviously, we’d all love to wake up tomorrow and the higher people in charge (are) like, ‘we have this thing under control, in two weeks we’ll be able to resume our normal lives.’ That would be ideal.”

But that’s not realistic.

In the last week, NBA players received their regular paychecks while their union and the league continued discussions about how to handle the financial repercussions of possibly canceling games. That still hasn’t happened — there were even some who thought an 82-game season still was possible if the league could begin playing by June 1. But even optimists feel those possible cancellations are more likely probable.

While the NBA continues to operate in an “everything-is-on-the-table” way when it comes to ideas, there is a strong sentiment among teams to postpone the draft, which is scheduled for June 25.

“The NBA’s going to determine that and basically they’ve just instructed us, ‘Just trust us and we’ll let you know,’ ” said Lawrence Frank, the Clippers’ president of basketball operations. “So you have to be prepared if they said, ‘Hey, it is the date.’ You have to be prepared — but also knowing that, depending how things play out, that there could be some movement.”

The draft traditionally has been conducted in the immediate aftermath of the season. But with the season in purgatory, that date is tied to the resumption of play.

When, how and if the season can return is tied to a myriad of factors: the availability of rapid testing, herd immunity, the ability to test for antibodies, better treatment and on and on. Will it happen in Las Vegas? Maybe it happens in a city that’s already been through the worst of the coronavirus?

There’s so much to figure out with an almost daily change in facts.

“We’ll listen to what they tell us,” Clippers coach Doc Rivers said. “And then when they tell us we can all get back together, we’re all going to do it.”