Este sitio web fue traducido automáticamente. Para obtener más información, por favor haz clic aquí.

Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox. Sign up here.

Utah Jazz forward Joe Ingles said he would retire from the NBA without hesitation if it meant keeping his son, who suffers from autism, safe from the threat of the coronavirus.

The Australian native said Tuesday during a podcast interview with The Atlantic that he would have “zero issues” getting on a plane and heading back home with his family following the NBA’s decision to suspend the remainder of the season after news broke that Ingles’ teammate, Rudy Gobert, was the first player in the league to test positive for COVID-19.

CELTIC’S ENES KANTER WAS WORRIED ABOUT CORONAVIRUS CONTRACTION AFTER NBA’S SEASON SUSPENSION 

“If you had to tell me that you could never play again to protect Jacob from this, I would walk away, fly to Australia and never play another game in my life and be very content with it,” Ingles said of his 3-year-old son who was diagnosed with autism last year.

He added: “I could walk out of this gym now, in the clothes I'm in, and go to the airport. I would have zero issues because I wouldn't want to put my family through that. I don't want to put Jacob through that. I don't want to put his sister through that, and I definitely don't want to put his mother through that. So it's really hard."

Ingles said that he, like many of his teammates, “would love to go back and play” but nothing is worth risking his son’s health.

"There's a million reasons why I want to play. But the one reason – I love Jacob – to not play is the one that I would stick by." Ingles son is considered high risk for COVID-19 because of his weakened immune system.

Joe Ingles is one of the top sharpshooters in the NBA. (Photo by Alex Goodlett/Getty Images)

Joe Ingles is one of the top sharpshooters in the NBA. (Photo by Alex Goodlett/Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO GET MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM 

Aside from Gobert, Utah’s Donovan Mitchell also tested positive for the disease. In all, 14 players have confirmed cases of the coronavirus.

Ingles said he tested negative for the disease and is doing his part to stay isolated with his family in their Salt Lake City home.