Major League Baseball season roiled
by COVID-19 postponements
Send a link to a friend
[July 28, 2020]
By Frank Pingue and Amy Tennery
(Reuters) - Just four days after
beginning a truncated coronavirus-delayed season, Major League
Baseball ran into a serious obstacle on Monday with the postponement
of scheduled games due to a COVID-19 outbreak among Miami Marlins
players.
The postponement of the games in Philadelphia and Miami was a
potentially ominous development for MLB and other major professional
sports leagues in the United States and Canada hoping to forge ahead
during the pandemic. The National Basketball Association and
National Hockey League are set to resume play this week after a
hiatus of more than four months, while National Football League
training camps are opening.
While it was unclear whether the MLB season has been placed in
jeopardy, some public health experts urged the suspension of play.
"They need to suspend games, do aggressive contact tracing, and see
how bad this outbreak is," Dr Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard
Global Health Institute, wrote on Twitter. "I don't know if MLB can
resume the season. But, without aggressive action and vigilance,
there is little hope we'll see more baseball without more
outbreaks."
MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred told the MLB Network on Monday that the
health of the players and their families was the league's "first
concern."
"We're making sure we do everything possible to minimize the spread
of the virus among our employees," he said, adding that the league
has done tens of thousands of tests and the positive rate had been
.4%.
"So we feel like the protocols have worked pretty well," he said.
Manfred said he would only consider halting a team's season if the
club lost so many players that it was rendered "completely
non-competitive."
The United States leads the world in coronavirus cases and deaths,
with worrisome infection rates in numerous states including the
Marlins' home state of Florida.
According to an ESPN report, at least 13 Marlins players have tested
positive in recent days.
The Marlins opened their season on Friday in Philadelphia and were
scheduled to return to Florida on Sunday for their scheduled Monday
home opener against the Baltimore Orioles but put off traveling
after the positive tests.
The team's Tuesday afternoon game against the Orioles in Miami will
also be postponed.
The Philadelphia Phillies were scheduled to host the New York
Yankees on Monday but that game was postponed because the Marlins
players had used the stadium.
MLB said in a statement the games were shelved while it conducts
"additional COVID-19 testing," with the Marlins self-quarantining in
Philadelphia awaiting the results.
[to top of second column] |
Just four days after beginning a truncated coronavirus-delayed
season, Major League Baseball ran into a serious obstacle on Monday
with the postponement of two scheduled games due to a COVID-19
outbreak among Miami Marlins players. Freddie Joyner has more.
If the tests are negative, the team will play the Orioles on
Wednesday in Baltimore, Manfred said.
Marlins CEO Derek Jeter said in a statement that the postponement
"was the correct decision to ensure we take a collective pause and
try to properly grasp the totality of this situation."
PANDEMIC HAVOC
The pandemic has roiled sports worldwide, delaying and interrupting
seasons, forcing the cancellation and postponement of major events
and pushing the Summer Olympics planned for Japan back a year amid
questions about health risks for athletes and others. U.S.
collegiate sports also are in flux.
MLB had planned to open its 162-game regular season in March but
postponed it because of the pandemic, opting for a condensed 60-game
schedule that began last Thursday in Washington.
"Remember when Manfred said players health was PARAMOUNT?!" Los
Angeles Dodgers pitcher David Price, who opted out of the season due
to the pandemic, asked on Twitter. "Part of the reason I'm at home
right now is because players health wasn't being put first. I can
see that hasn't changed."
The NBA has assembled its teams in a restricted campus at Disney
World in Florida. The NHL has brought its teams to two sites in
Canada. But most MLB teams are playing in their usual stadiums. MLB,
NBA and NHL games have no fans present.
"They are kind of at the razor's edge at this point," Bob Dorfman, a
sports marketing expert at Baker Street Advertising in San
Francisco, said of MLB. "The last thing they would consider doing is
cancelling the season, and I think they will exhaust every other
possibility, whatever that might be. There is just too much money on
the line."
The NHL is due to resume play on Saturday with an expanded 24-team
playoff format in Edmonton and Toronto. The NHL said it registered
no positive COVID-19 tests out of the 4,256 administered between
July 18 and July 25. The NBA is scheduled to resume its season on
Thursday.
With the NFL season scheduled to begin in September, Commissioner
Roger Goodell said in an open letter to fans that teams must follow
rigorous health and safety protocols, with "strict regulations" for
isolating players who test positive.
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto, Amy Tennery in New York and
Rory Carroll in Los Angeles; Writing by Will Dunham; Editing by
Matthew Lewis and Sonya Hepinstall)
[© 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. |