Boston Herald

Tough go for minor leaguers

Players can only get paid during the season

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For most, the news was delivered via text message or email.

“All minor league players and staff will be sent home over the next 24-48 hours. This is not to be repeated, but for your informatio­n to start preparing,” the Colorado Rockies told players in an email.

“Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we are closing our facility and suspending spring training,” the Milwaukee Brewers wrote to their minor leaguers. “Players that are currently rehabbing should remain in Phoenix. All others should make plans to travel home as soon as tomorrow, Saturday 3/14.”

“We encourage everyone to go home until further notice,” the Chicago White Sox told players. “If it is unsafe for you to travel, or there may be challenges in a return to the US, you may remain here, but this must be discussed and cleared by the organizati­on.”

Those communicat­ions, sent Friday and obtained by The Associated Press, left minor leaguers at spring training camps in Florida and Arizona scrambling. Most were told to go home, including players from Venezuela, the Dominican Republic and other countries, despite concerns they may have trouble returning to the U.S.

Baseball players are only paid in-season — which does not include spring training — and the minimum yearly salary at Class A was only $5,800 last season. In lieu of paychecks, many minor leaguers depend on team complexes for housing, meals and workout facilities during spring camp. Most also get a per diem of $100200 per week.

For most players, that all disappeare­d when Major League Baseball suspended spring training Friday.

“We will be pretending this is just the offseason,” one player recalled being told by a team official in a meeting Friday, when he was informed he must leave. All minor leaguers who spoke to The Associated Press for this story did so on condition of anonymity due to concerns that teams might punish them for speaking publicly.

That player had been at a camp in Florida and spoke to the AP on Sunday while driving to a friend’s place in Texas — he’s from the West Coast and didn’t want to take his car across the entire country.

He has about $800 in his bank account, no second job lined up and no idea how he’ll make ends meet until spring camps re-open — and he has no idea when that will be.

“How are you supposed to get a job when you don’t know when you’re coming back?” he said. “And that’s without this whole outbreak situation. Because of the COVID-19 deal, most people are working from home, and they’re not hiring, they’re cutting hours.”

That player said he followed the lead of Oakland minor league pitcher Peter Bayer and signed up for a food-delivery job, but he was unsure how much work that would provide. Bayer tweeted Thursday night about his new part-time gig.

“Who knows what’s going to happen with the MILB/ pay,” he wrote. “So I decided to start driving with Door Dash tonight. $62 in 3 hours... not too bad.”

Filing for unemployme­nt isn’t an option either, since players are under contract by major league teams and are thus ineligible for those benefits.

Major League Baseball left it up to individual teams to determine how best to handle their minor leaguers amid the outbreak.

The Detroit Tigers and Boston Red Sox said they hoped to let minor leaguers stay in camp if they preferred.

“This may be the best option for them,” Red Sox executive Chaim Bloom said. “And we want to make sure that is a good option.”

Even for the teams permitting players to train at team complexes, it’s unclear if that arrangemen­t will last. MLB is expected to update teams on its policy Monday.

 ?? AP ?? SUSPENDED: A sign outside Hammond Stadium reads "spring training suspended" after Thursday’s game between the Minnesota Twins and the Baltimore Orioles was canceled.
AP SUSPENDED: A sign outside Hammond Stadium reads "spring training suspended" after Thursday’s game between the Minnesota Twins and the Baltimore Orioles was canceled.

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