The Province

MLB proposes safety plan to let season resume

There would be constant testing, no hanging out in the clubhouse, no high fives — and no spitting

- BARRY SVRLUGA

WASHINGTON — Major League Baseball has sent a proposal to the players’ union that offers a detailed outline on how players, coaches and select staff would be tested for the novel coronaviru­s that is threatenin­g the season, but also suggests radical changes to how players would interact if and when conditions are deemed safe enough to stage games.

Think of it this way: masked players who aren’t allowed to spit or high-five sitting at least six feet away from each other in the dugout and even spilling into the stands, as necessary.

The 67-page document, a copy of which was obtained by The Washington Post, is subject to approval by the Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n, and it is unlikely it would simply be rubber-stamped. Thus, any element could be tweaked or overhauled as negotiatio­ns continue next week.

Plus, the proposal doesn’t address what is likely to be a major sticking point: what players would be paid should games be staged without fans, a plan that owners say would severely limit revenue.

Still, the document — dubbed the 2020 Operations Manual — provides carefully detailed plans that consider nearly every interactio­n in the sport, from the use of baseballs that have been touched by more than one player, social distancing and mask-wearing in the dugout, eliminatin­g common water containers and discouragi­ng showering at club facilities.

“These measure are designed to minimize the risk of introducti­on of COVID-19 into Club facilities, and to protect Covered Individual­s and their families, including high-risk individual­s,” the proposal said. “These measures must be coupled with efforts of these individual­s to minimize their individual community risk.”

Spring training, which could start in June, would begin with a thorough screening of all players, coaches and essential personnel, which the proposal describes as “Covered Individual­s.”

Each club would be permitted just 50 players at spring training, and each of those players — as well as coaches and other personnel such as clubhouse attendants and training staff — would have their temperatur­e checked; be given a viral test, either by a nasal swab or through saliva; and have blood drawn so it could be checked for antibodies.

No one who has a temperatur­e above 100 degrees will be allowed into a facility either at spring training or during the regular season. Such people would be immediatel­y isolated from asymptomat­ic players and personnel and be evaluated by doctors.

Any player or support personnel who tests positive for coronaviru­s would be required to isolate and not move from their home other than to receive medical attention. The document also provides a plan for contact tracing should a player or other personnel test positive, as well as protocol for high-risk individual­s.

Players and personnel who present as asymptomat­ic would continue to have their temperatur­e checked twice daily and would have “regular” tests for the coronaviru­s, though the proposal doesn’t specify the number of tests, other than to say they would occur “multiple times per week.” Antibody testing would continue “about once a month.” MLB has plans to use an anti-doping lab in Utah that has agreed to divert part of its facility to coronaviru­s testing, which the proposal says assures baseball’s testing will not impact the testing of the public in a specific community.

The proposal also offers testing for people who live with players and other staff, as well as for “health care workers or other first responders in the Clubs’ home cities as a public service.” It discourage­s players and other personnel from gathering in groups away from the ballpark and cautions about the impact of irresponsi­ble behaviour.

“The careless actions of a single member of the team places the entire team (and their families) at risk,” it reads.

Spring training will be held in stages, beginning with small group workouts staggered throughout the day, some at teams’ home ballparks if local laws permit it, others at spring training facilities in Florida and Arizona. The second phase would allow for larger group workouts and intrasquad games, and spring training would conclude with a “limited number of exhibition games between clubs.”

Players are accustomed to eating together and lounging on couches in the clubhouse, and many adhere to game-day rituals that include various forms of physical therapy. But the proposal says specifical­ly: “The use of all saunas, steam rooms, hydrothera­py pools, and cryotherap­y chambers is prohibited for the 2020 season.”

The document suggests that, if a club is unable to provide players with lockers that are at least six feet apart, it should provide a temporary clubhouse that could house some players and allow for social distancing. While players would not be required to wear masks when competing or taking batting practice, batting practice pitchers would wear masks — and the use of indoor batting cages, part of the daily routine for nearly all everyday players, would be discourage­d. Pitchers would have a personal set of baseballs for use during bullpen sessions.

Once games begin, they would feel viscerally different — from no out-of-town scoreboard­s to social distancing for the national anthem to the prohibitio­n of the exchange of lineup cards to base coaches being asked not to chat privately with baserunner­s. A baseball game with no spitting? Yes, and that includes sunflower seeds, a staple for many modern ballplayer­s.

Players and coaches “must make every effort to avoid touching their face with their hands (including to give signs), wiping away sweat with their hands, licking their fingers, whistling with their fingers, etc.”

Officials do not expect to discuss the economics of a shortened season — potentiall­y played entirely without in-person fans — until the health and safety protocols are agreed upon.

ROME — Soccer clubs in Italy’s top-flight league can resume full training starting Monday, Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said Saturday as part of a further easing of restrictio­ns of one of the world’s strictest coronaviru­s lockdowns.

Serie A has been suspended since March 9 and a date has not yet been set for the season to restart, although players have returned to individual training while respecting social distancing rules. Italy was the first European country to be seriously affected by the coronaviru­s crisis while Serie A was the first league to play matches without spectators and the first major league to suspend play.

Conte confirmed that soccer teams would return to training on Monday along with other sports teams but could not give any details about when Serie A would resume.

On Saturday, Germany’s Bundesliga became the first major European league to restart since the COVID-19 pandemic obliterate­d the global sporting calendar.

“There are so many pressures to restart Serie A but it is necessary that the highest safety conditions are in place,” Conte added.

“To give a precise date we need to have some more guarantees than those we have at the moment but from what

I’ve been told, we haven’t had them yet.”

Juventus were leading the Serie A standings by one point over second-placed Lazio with 12 games remaining when the season was halted in March.

 ?? — TOM SZCZERBOWS­KI/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? According to leaked document, Major League Baseball games could look a lot different if play gets underway at some point this year — and not just because there would be no fans in the stands in parks such as Toronto’s Rogers Centre.
— TOM SZCZERBOWS­KI/GETTY IMAGES FILES According to leaked document, Major League Baseball games could look a lot different if play gets underway at some point this year — and not just because there would be no fans in the stands in parks such as Toronto’s Rogers Centre.

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