Report: MLB looks at possible
closed-door restart in Arizona
Send a link to a friend
[April 07, 2020]
Major League Baseball is
exploring the possibility of restarting its season with games behind
closed doors at facilities in the Arizona area, multiple media
outlets reported late Monday night.
MLB hopes the first games could occur as soon as May, according to
ESPN's Jeff Passan, who added that sources indicated June might be
"more realistic."
MLB, like all other major North American sports leagues, is shut
down due to the coronavirus pandemic. On March 12, MLB halted spring
training and pushed back its scheduled Opening Day from March 26 to
mid-April. On March 16, the start of the season was pushed back
indefinitely.
Since then, team owners and the players union have discussed plans
to complete as much of the 162-game schedule as possible while still
following the advice of medical experts regarding the course of the
COVID-19 outbreak.
The proposed Arizona plan would see games played at the Arizona
Diamondbacks' home, Chase Field in Phoenix, as well as the 10 spring
training stadiums within 25 miles of Phoenix.
According to ESPN, the teams and "essential personnel" would be
housed in area hotels, traveling only to and from the stadiums for
games. The report stated, "Federal officials at the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention as well as the National Institute of
Health have been supportive of a plan that would adhere to strict
isolation, promote social distancing and allow MLB to become the
first professional sport to return."
[to top of second column] |
Fans watch from the standing room only section during the fourth
inning in game five of the 2019 World Series between the Houston
Astros and the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park. Mandatory
Credit: Peter Casey-USA TODAY Sports
The willingness of the union to agree to have the players
quarantined away from their families for an indefinite stretch is
one of the many potential stumbling blocks to the proposal. Another,
according to ESPN, is concern about the health of managers, coaches
and other older personnel whose risk of problems related to COVID-19
is greater is than that of the players.
Maneuvering to arrange housing, security and transportation, among
other matters, amid "stay at home" orders such as the one enacted in
Arizona as of March 31 further complicate the potential for the
proposal to be enacted.
The Arizona Republic reported that the Phoenix-area plan was just
one option MLB is exploring, with a source telling the newspaper,
"They're talking about everything. There's nothing they can rule
out."
--Field Level Media
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|