Antelope Valley Press

MLB: Vigilance preached in virus hot spots like California

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current Coronaviru­s hotspots. California, Texas and Arizona are all still fighting high caseloads.

It’s a big reason no one dares to get cocky. Vigilance is preached.

“This is a tough virus, man,” Colorado manager Bud Black said. “You don’t know how it’s going to play out. A lot of these positive cases could come from very innocent means. I don’t know. I just know that individual­ly and from a team component we have to do what we’re asked to do.”

Overall, baseball has had widespread success in holding off the virus. The league said Friday that it had conducted 13,043 tests over the past week with only 13 positives, which comes out to a positive rate of 0.1%. But it only takes a handful of positive tests to throw the sport into chaos.

The biggest motivation for taking precaution­s is obvious: keeping players and staff safe from a potentiall­y dangerous illness. While there haven’t been many serious cases in the big leagues, Atlanta’s Freddie Freeman fought off a very high fever and Boston’s Eduardo Rodriguez is out for the season because of heart inflammati­on related to his Coronaviru­s case.

There are also competitiv­e reasons to stay safe. Missing a week of games and quarantini­ng in hotels is not a great way to maintain fitness. When one team gets the virus, several others are affected. MLB recently announced a long list of schedule changes that were needed because of the recent outbreaks and 12 teams were involved.

The scheduling adjustment­s probably aren’t over: The Cardinals and Cubs game scheduled for Friday was postponed after the Cardinals had another positive test.

“It would be devastatin­g to have to sit down for an extended period of time, to potentiall­y miss a player or two that is extremely important to your lineup and worry about the contact tracing situation,” Lovullo said. “The tail keeps wagging. We made sure we talk to the guys because it’s not just you, it’s going to be an effect that’s felt throughout the organizati­on and probably your family.”

San Diego Padres firstyear manager Jayce Tingler said it’s important to be willing to adapt as more is learned about the best way to avoid problems. He said his team’s recent trips to San Francisco and Colorado were relatively smooth.

“It seems like we’ve been going through this pandemic, it feels like, for a long time, but I think the truth is, the scientists, the doctors, they’re learning new things,” Tingler said. “So as more informatio­n comes out, the protocols seem to change a little bit.”

Players in the West are well aware that one mistake — no matter how innocuous — could end the West’s current success.

“After seeing what’s going on with the Marlins, that’s unfortunat­e, but everything that we’ve been doing over here we’ve been making sure that we’re staying on top of wearing our masks,” A’s Gold Glove third baseman Matt Chapman said. “Our team’s doing our part because we don’t want to be one of those teams like the Marlins that screws it up for everybody.

“We’re taking everything super serious over here, we’re wearing our masks, we’re being smart off the field because that’s another big thing.”

Baseball is nearly 25% of the way through its schedule, but the next 75% is far from a guarantee.

“We want to play, we all love this game,” Lovullo said. “We want to go out, do what we do best and possibly have a great ending to this season. If we do the wrong thing that’s just not going to be in the cards.”

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