The Province

Radio silence

Blue Jays choosing to keep things close to their chest with training camp transparen­cy

- ROB LONGLEY rlongley@postmedia.com @longleysun­sport

From Baltimore, there were images of infield drills.

From Yankee Stadium, video of a simulated game with starting pitcher J.A. Happ in action on the mound.

And there was more video from Boston’s Fenway Park, including some of Jackie Bradley taking batting practice.

All around Major League Baseball, in fact, the sights and sounds of what the league is calling summer camp were on display over the past couple of days, at least attempting to build excitement for July 23 opening day, as difficult as that has become given the challenges of playing pro sports in a pandemic.

In Toronto, however, it has been a wall of silence from the Blue Jays.

We’re told from someone involved directly that the Jays have indeed had workouts each of Monday and Tuesday — the last team to hit their home stadium since MLB declared camps open for business last Friday.

Whether it’s a deep level of paranoia from the executive offices or a pile of logistical concerns too high to navigate — both explanatio­ns are possible — next to nothing is known about what’s happened at the Rogers Centre, other than the roof being open.

Transparen­cy is lacking and we’re left to wonder why.

It has been far from good news around baseball, but many teams have at least been up front with developmen­ts off the field, some even naming names of those players and officials who have recorded positive COVID-19 tests.

In some camps, workouts were suspended over the past couple of days with explanatio­ns given as to why — namely the inefficien­cies in MLB testing that have delayed results.

In Toronto though, there has been nothing. No pictures — other than a distant panoramic shot on the team’s official Twitter account and an Instagram story from pitcher Nate Pearson that has since expired.

At the top of the list of concerns with the Jays, we surmise, is the desperatio­n the team has in its late push for federal government approval to have the Rogers Centre cleared to play host to the Jays’ 30 home games.

That can’t be an easy sell, given the team came here from Florida with a fifth fewer players than anticipate­d.

Now the Jays front office must convince the government to allow the team to host home games AFTER going to Florida and Washington to start its season.

Furthermor­e, in the Jays’ first home stand they are scheduled to face the Philadelph­ia Phillies, who on Tuesday revealed that three players and three coaches have tested positive for the virus.

Understand­ably (if to a fault) then, the Jays are being extra careful.

But while other stadiums have been opened to the media this week — allowable under MLB’s health and safety protocol for return to action — the Rogers Centre has remained a closed shop and is expected to be that way until at least Thursday.

This in part can be attributed to some of those logistical concerns we mentioned. Toronto was always playing catchup in this treacherou­s return to action because of the delayed clearance to have the downtown dome used for training camp. Intake testing had to be done in Dunedin but because of the time it took to process the results, the team charter didn’t arrive at Pearson until late Sunday.

Unlike other teams, the Jays didn’t have delays in getting the verdict on testing for players and coaching staff in Florida. Testing on the Toronto-based staff was a different story, however, with delays that meant many were unable to access the stadium to help prepare for camp the past few days. Naturally, that has forced altering the way they go about their business.

What we do know is that somewhere between 45 and 47 players participat­ed in workouts here as manager Charlie Montoyo and his staff oversee morning and afternoon sessions.

We get there are no tickets to sell this year, though that’s hardly cause for keeping fans in the dark. Remember those are the same fans who suffered through three consecutiv­e miserable seasons now and many have bought into the legitimate club spin touting the optimism of the bright young team.

We can pretty much guarantee you that those same fans would love to be hearing how ace starter Hyun-Jin Ryu is looking, if he’s even in action. Same with Bo Bichette, Vlad Guerrero Jr. and the rest of the young guns who make the Jays such an intriguing entry in this shortened season.

Did Randal Grichuk carry over the good form he was showing at the plate in March? Is Vladdy is shape? And is Pearson still dealing that triple-digit fastball? Who knows?

If the team is going to celebrate the release of its schedule (as it did Monday night), why not sell what’s coming?

The team has scheduled a conference call with Montoyo for Wednesday which will at least update some of the baseball-specific questions. On a straight news level, however, it is perplexing that the organizati­on has gone so deep undergroun­d, especially when teams around the league are open and up front with off-field developmen­ts.

Not all of this is the Jays’ fault, of course. The team is operating under far stricter protocols than other teams, a reality negotiated in their exemption from border closing/quarantini­ng regulation­s here. So yes, it has been tough.

For now though, just how difficult it has been is anyone’s guess.

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