Heat's Goran Dragic says he's not going to Slovenia during layoff

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    Heat's Goran Dragic says he's not going to Slovenia during layoff

    Goran Dragic of the Miami Heat said Tuesday that he is prepared to forgo his annual offseason 

    move back to his native Slovenia if that is what the NBA schedule necessitates.

    Dragic, his wife and their two children are in Miami and have no plans to leave for Slovenia amid the global coronavirus pandemic. 

    His parents recently left Miami to return home, but the Heat guard says he's staying.

    "Three days ago they flew back home because they had to -- the government said that all the Slovenian citizens needed to get back," Dragic said, referring to his parents, adding that they wore masks and gloves on their not-very-full flight back to Slovenia. "But my situation is different. Here is my home. We have health insurance in America and we have a home to go to, so we're going to stay here."

    Dragic and his family have gotten a firsthand global view of the pandemic.

    He's in Miami, and so is his uncle -- who is staying in the U.S. because he cannot get back to his native Serbia; Dragic said that country has essentially locked its borders over health concerns. Dragic's brother Zoran, a former Heat guard, was quarantined while playing in Spain, then returned to Slovenia recently and is under quarantine again, unable to leave his hotel room for a couple of more weeks.

    "It's a really crazy situation over there," Dragic said, detailing what his brother went through in Spain -- one of the hardest-hit nations, with more than 94,000 confirmed cases of the virus and more than 8,000 deaths attributed to the virus, the second-highest total worldwide behind only Italy. Slovenia has confirmed 802 cases through Tuesday, with 15 deaths.

    In Miami, though, Dragic is trying to keep some sense of normalcy.

    Dragic said the Heat are participating in a daily team workout on Zoom most mornings, those sessions often including strength and conditioning coach Eric Foran and Heat assistant coach Chris Quinn, among others.

    "We try to work together, in isolation," Dragic said.

    Dragic has also been working out individually at his waterfront home, trying to stay fit. He's hopeful that the season resumes at some point and said he hopes the league has teams play no more than a handful of games before starting the playoffs.

    "I'm running around the house. I'm going to be in good shape," Dragic said.

    Dragic is averaging 16.1 points and 5.1 assists this season for the Heat, coming off the bench in all but one of his 54 games. NBA.COM