National Post

No joy in Chicago’s Wrigleyvil­le as pandemic shuts down baseball

- Brendan O’brien

CHICAGO • A passerby occasional­ly stops on the empty plaza to take a selfie under the “Wrigley Field Home of Chicago Cubs” marquee or pause at the ballpark’s locked gates for a glimpse at its fabled ivy and brick outfield wall.

The throngs of Cubs fans who pour out of the neighbourh­ood bars and scurry inside the 106-year-old Wrigley Field before every home game are missing, along with the palpable excitement that fills the Wrigleyvil­le neighbourh­ood of Chicago’s North Side at least 81 times a season. The COVID-19 pandemic has brought one of Chicago’s signature spots to a near standstill, devastatin­g its businesses and dishearten­ing diehard Cubs fans who live steps from the park known as “The Friendly Confines.”

“It’s been a mixture of fear and hope,” said Emily Young, a lifelong fan and owner of two 7- Eleven franchises in Wrigleyvil­le. “We are all scared. We don’t ... know what tomorrow is going to look like and what baseball’s going to bring.”

The absence of baseball, which normally starts around early April, is almost too much to bear for Cubs fans, who are renowned for their patience, having waited 108 years for their club to win the World Series in 2016.

“It’s real sad,” said Richard Lind, 34, standing outside the park wearing a Cubs hat.

“There is a definite void, especially when you need a distractio­n most,” the bartender said.

The Cubs have postponed 30 of the 81 games scheduled to be played in 2020 at the 41,000-seat Wrigley Field

Major League Baseball is negotiatin­g with its players associatio­n over a proposal for a modified season that could begin in July. Baseball’s hiatus has evaporated the US$870 million spent by fans annually inside and outside Wrigley, a good portion of which is revenue earned by Wrigleyvil­le business owners, according to the Cubs.

The lack of business forced Harry Sdralis, owner of Wrigleyvil­le Dogs stand near Wrigley, to reduce staff hours and forgo a paycheque.

“You’re talking about massive losses right now. Massive,” he said. “Our family business will continue because we are a strong family, strong community and strong city.”

The lights are off and bar stools turned upside down inside taverns and restaurant­s around the park. Signs on the doors thank customers and promise an eventual reopening.

Whether all 30 of MLB’S stadiums will be available to host games is uncertain.

Even if baseball resumes, it is likely that attendance will be limited or not allowed at all, a nightmaris­h prospect for Wrigleyvil­le.

“How will the bars be able to pay their bills?” said Pete Mazzone, 37, who has worked at various Wrigleyvil­le establishm­ents. “My guess is that at least 30 per cent of the bars and businesses will close.”

Some establishm­ents offer carry- out food, but that is a far cry from the electric atmosphere that consumes the neighbourh­ood on the morning of an afternoon game, which often start at 1:20 p.m.

“The smell of the burgers, hotdogs and peanuts ... we would be rocking and rolling by noon,” Murphy’s Bleachers manager Pat Curth said outside his bar facing Wrigley’s bleacher gates.

From the singing of Take Me Out to the Ball Game that rings across Wrigleyvil­le during the seventh- inning stretch, to the blue “W” flag waving high above the park after a victory, the team’s allure draws the most fervent fans to live nearby.

Even if fans are banned from the park, “people will line the streets, just listening for the crack of a bat” said local resident Matt Patterson, 24. Whatever the future holds, he said Wrigleyvil­le will “be happier with baseball.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? The Chicago Cubs have postponed 30 of the 81 home games on the team’s 2020 schedule, and local businesses
are taking massive losses.
REUTERS The Chicago Cubs have postponed 30 of the 81 home games on the team’s 2020 schedule, and local businesses are taking massive losses.

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