Major League Baseball ready for
season unlike any other
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[July 22, 2020]
(Reuters) - When Major League
Baseball opens its coronavirus-delayed 2020 season on Thursday,
things will look a lot different than fans of America's favorite
pastime are used to seeing as COVID-19 has led to a number of
significant changes.
While players will be tested on a regular basis and must quarantine
in their hotel rooms when on the road this season, there are many
other changes in place that will be hard to miss when the first
pitch is thrown.
EMPTY STADIUMS
The traditional singing of "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" during the
seventh-inning stretch will be missing the backup vocals of fans as
ballparks will be eerily empty for at least the start of the season.
The decision to potentially allow fans this season will be made
based on local government approval in each market and MLB's approval
after consultation with all appropriate parties.
NO SPITTING
The sight of baseball players spitting while on the field is as old
as the game itself. But MLB has said the practice, which includes
saliva, sunflower seeds, peanut shells and tobacco, is prohibited at
all times in club facilities and on the field.
MLB has also said pitchers may no longer lick their fingers while on
the mound in a bid to get a better grip on the ball but may instead
carry a wet rag in their back pocket.
REDUCED SCHEDULE
MLB had originally planned to open its gruelling 162-game regular
season in March but after staring at an ever-shrinking calendar
opted instead for a condensed 60-game schedule in a bid to salvage
the 2020 campaign.
The virus-abbreviated season, which was only agreed to after testy
negotiations between MLB and the players union, will be baseball's
shortest since 1878.
EXTRA INNINGS
In a bid to bring a quicker end to games given a jam-packed schedule
that has turned the season into a sprint rather than a marathon,
after the ninth inning, teams will get to start each half-inning
with a runner on second base.
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The empty field and stands at Nationals Park, home of Major League
Baseball’s (MLB) Washington Nationals, are seen after it was
reported MLB owners approved a plan that could start the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) outbreak-delayed season around the Fourth of July
in ballparks without fans, in Washington, U.S., May 13, 2020.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
While also potentially ending games quicker, the change is expected
to protect a team's bullpen health and would also limit the time
players spend in the relatively close quarters of a dugout or
bullpen.
NEW-LOOK SCHEDULE
The schedule for the season will put increased emphasis on
geographical proximity as MLB wants to limit travel.
Rather than have clubs travel across North America, this year's
schedule will be regionally based, meaning teams will play 40 games
within their division and 20 interleague games against the
corresponding geographical division.
UNIVERSAL DH
One of the most notable differences between MLB's American League
and National League has been the AL's use of a designated hitter
(DH) -- a player who bats in place of a pitcher -- since 1973. That
difference will not exist this year.
All NL games will include the use of the designated hitter for the
first time in history as part of an emphasis on pitcher health
during the truncated season.
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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