Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cards’ series off

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Seven St. Louis Cardinals players and six staff members have tested positive for covid-19, causing Major League Baseball to postpone the team’s four-game series that was set to start today at Detroit.

MILWAUKEE — Seven St. Louis Cardinals players and six staff members have tested positive for covid-19, causing Major League Baseball to postpone the team’s four-game series at Detroit.

The series was to have been played at Comerica Park from today through Thursday.

“You think about how quickly something like this can spread,” Cardinals General Manager John Mozeliak said. “Until it touches you, you sometimes might not believe it, but needless to say we know this is very real, and we know it moves quickly and it moves silently, but it can infect a lot of people fast.”

Mozeliak said that five of those who tested positive did not show symptoms. He said the others did — headaches, cough, sniffles, low-grade fever.

“And of those eight, it’s a variety of symptoms but nothing at this point requiring anything like hospitaliz­ation,” Mozeliak said.

The Cardinals have been in quarantine since Thursday in Milwaukee, where their series with the Brewers also was postponed due to positive tests.

The Cardinals’ situation comes after the Miami Marlins had an outbreak in their traveling party that sidelined half their players, raising concerns about the viability of this pandemic-shortened season.

“To this point, unfortunat­ely, we’ve handled this the same way our country’s handled this,” Brewers Manager Craig Counsell said. “We put together guidelines that were well-intentione­d and protocols, and then we handed them off to 30 individual operators, i.e. states, and asked them to do their best. Adherence to a set of protocols and suggestion­s and trying to get it right has just not gone well. It just hasn’t gone well.

“It’s because this virus is an incredible, difficult opponent. It’s put us behind the 8-ball. I desperatel­y want to play and finish the season. It’s so important for so many people and so many places. But it’s not going well right now. It’s not.”

Brewers outfielder Lorenzo Cain announced Saturday he wouldn’t play the rest of the season, citing “all of the uncertaint­y and unknowns surroundin­g our game at this time.”

Counsell said Monday that “it’s safe to say the news of the Cardinals was jarring, and it may have been the final straw” for Cain.

While all the members of the Cardinals’ traveling party who tested positive have returned home, the rest of them remain isolated in their Milwaukee hotel rooms.

The team is being tested daily. “The hope would be to travel back to St. Louis Wednesday morning, work out Wednesday afternoon, and allow players to get their feet moving again, their bodies moving again,” Mozeliak said. “And then on Thursday have a more robust workout and then play Friday.”

St. Louis last played Wednesday at Minnesota and is tentativel­y set to resume its schedule Friday at home against the Chicago Cubs.

Mozeliak said he wasn’t sure how the team might reschedule some of these games that have been wiped out with two series getting postponed.

“I haven’t really even thought about our schedule much other than hopefully playing Friday,” Mozeliak said. “It’s hard to think about the future when you’re literally trying to just get through the day.”

The Marlins are set to resume play today in Baltimore. Miami has not played since July 26.

Because the Marlins’ outbreak occurred in the visiting clubhouse at Citizens Bank Park, the Phillies were sidelined for a week while they were tested daily.

In another virus developmen­t, the “Field of Dreams” game in Iowa was postponed until 2021. The game at a new ballpark on the cornfield adjacent to the site of the 1989 movie had been planned for Aug. 13 in Dyersville between the Cardinals and Chicago White Sox.

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