The Peterborough Examiner

Jays to start season in Dunedin

Baseball team will play at least two homestands at spring training facility

- GREGORY STRONG

The Toronto Blue Jays are once again planning to play some home games south of the border.

When — or if — they can return to Rogers Centre this Major League Baseball season remains up in the air.

The team confirmed Thursday it will begin the 2021 regular season at its spring-training complex in Dunedin, Fla.

The 8,500-seat TD Ballpark will serve as the Blue Jays’ stadium for at least two homestands.

Canada’s lone big-league club played most of its home games in Buffalo, N.Y., last year. With border restrictio­ns still in place and the pandemic in full swing, the team decided that starting its home schedule in Florida made the most sense.

“I think we’ll all be watching the same things,” Blue Jays president Mark Shapiro said on a video call. “It’s going to be clear to all of us whether the circumstan­ces present a meaningful and healthy case for us to get back home.

“That’s where we want to be. We hope to get there and I think we’ll all be able to gauge whether or not that’s a possibilit­y.”

The Blue Jays will open their 162-game regular season on April 1 in New York against the New York Yankees. Toronto’s home opener is April 8 versus the Los Angeles Angels.

The finale of the Blue Jays’ second homestand is May 2 against Atlanta. The team will then head out on a 10-game road trip before a May 14 home game against Philadelph­ia.

With the Florida heat and weather more of a factor as the season progresses, Shapiro said a return to Buffalo’s Sahlen Field at some point was also a possibilit­y. “Some combinatio­n of Dunedin, Buffalo and Toronto is likely how we’re approachin­g the season,” Shapiro said. “With flexibilit­y, certainly factoring in public health and what’s best for competitiv­eness and our players, as being the main drivers of those decisions.”

The Canadian government didn’t allow the Blue Jays to play at home last season because of the risk of spreading COVID-19, citing frequent travel required in the U.S. during a baseball season.

Shapiro said he didn’t ask the federal government to start the season in Toronto because public health has not yet improved sufficient­ly.

It remains unlikely the team would gain approval to play May games in Toronto. A return home in the second half of the season may be more realistic, after players and large segments of the population in the U.S. and Canada are potentiall­y vaccinated.

The Blue Jays were 17-9 at Sahlen Field last season and 3228 overall. Toronto returned to the playoffs for the first time since 2016, but was swept by Tampa Bay in the wild-card series.

The minor-league baseball season was cancelled last year and the 2021 schedule was unveiled Thursday. Shapiro said discussion­s are underway on potential infrastruc­ture changes at Sahlen Field and what that might mean for the Bisons.

“That’s our triple-A team so we certainly want them to be in the best situation possible,” he said. “If we end up moving to Buffalo at some point during the season, we’ll find a very good home for our triple-A team as well.”

Dunedin has been the Blue Jays’ spring-training home since the team’s inception in 1977.

The team has full training facilities there and its players are used to the area. Similar to spring training, the Blue Jays will host fans in a limited 15 per cent capacity at TD Ballpark.

Blue Jays ace Hyun-Jin Ryu signed with the team before the 2020 season and has yet to pitch a game in Toronto.

“Last season we had a new park and adjustment­s that we had to make,” Ryu said through a translator in Dunedin. “All these struggles we need to overcome.”

TD Ballpark was renovated in 2019 but more work will be done over the coming weeks to get it ready for major-league games.

Shapiro said four extra light towers will be used to supplement existing lights and improvemen­ts will be made to the visiting locker-room and weight room/training facilities.

He tabbed early June as an optimal date for a potential move from Dunedin. However, he noted there is flexibilit­y if it means the team can avoid moving twice.

“Next to the health and safety of our fans, players, and staff, the Blue Jays’ top priority is returning home to play on Canadian soil as soon as it is safe to do so,” the club said in a statement. “The club has been actively working through plans for what a safe return to Rogers Centre could look like, while also scenario-planning alternativ­es.

“The Blue Jays will re-evaluate the situation and those circumstan­ces will dictate next steps following the first two homestands.”

The Blue Jays will join the Toronto Raptors in the Tampa area. The Raptors are playing their home games at Amalie Arena, about 40 kilometres west of TD Ballpark, this season.

Along with hosting Blue Jays and Raptors home games, the Tampa area also has seen the National Hockey League’s Lightning and National Football League’s Buccaneers win their respective titles and MLB’s Rays advance to the World Series in the past year.

Major League Soccer’s Toronto FC (East Hartford, Conn.), CF Montreal (Harrison, N.J.) and Vancouver Whitecaps (Portland) also had to relocate to the U.S. for part of the 2020 season.

The NHL has avoided COVID-19 travel restrictio­ns by placing all seven Canadian teams in the North Division this season.

 ?? CHRIS URSO TAMPA BAY TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? In a statement Thursday morning, the Toronto Blue Jays said they have made “the difficult decision” to play their first two homestands at TD Ballpark in Dunedin, Fla., with the hopes of a return to play at Rogers Centre “as soon as possible.”
CHRIS URSO TAMPA BAY TIMES FILE PHOTO In a statement Thursday morning, the Toronto Blue Jays said they have made “the difficult decision” to play their first two homestands at TD Ballpark in Dunedin, Fla., with the hopes of a return to play at Rogers Centre “as soon as possible.”

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