Virus continues to loom over beginning of season
As Major League Baseball cautiously tiptoes closer toward beginning its delayed 2020 season, several teams welcomed back players who might have been exposed to the coronavirus and the San Francisco Giants resumed workouts Wednesday after finally receiving the results of COVID-19 tests administered over the weekend.
The San Diego Padres, however, revealed that newly acquired infielder Jorge Mateo’s intake test for coronavirus came back positive and he’s experienced symptoms. Mateo was acquired last week from Oakland for a player to be named or cash in the first trade since the transaction freeze was lifted.
Padres manager Jayce Tingler said Mateo has not been to the ballpark and is self-isolating.
San Diego announced last week that outfielder Tommy Pham tested positive for coronavirus and was asymptomatic. He has not yet rejoined the team.
In Boston, third baseman Rafael Devers practiced at Fenway Park for the first time since the Red Sox opened summer camp. Devers and an unspecified number of other players were working out at nearby Boston College and have since tested negative three times.
When tests reveal “pending” or inconclusive results, the Red Sox have decided to keep those players out of full-team workouts — even if a player hasn’t had a positive test.
“We have to be overly cautious,” manager Ron Roenicke said.
Devers batted .311 with a league-leading 54 doubles, 32 homers and 111 RBIs in 2019. He is scheduled to get a few at-bats when the Red Sox hold their first intrasquad scrimmage on Thursday.
The Giants, meanwhile, resumed workouts at Oracle Park after receiving test results from Saturday, all of which were negative for players and staff.
A delay in receiving the outcome of those tests forced the club to cancel practice Tuesday.
Scherzer shines
Washington ace Max Scherzer threw 48 pitches at Nationals Park and made quite an impression on manager Dave Martinez. “We wanted to keep him at 50, three full innings, but he looked good,” Martinez said. “The key now is his turnaround. Let’s see how he feels (Thursday).“
Carter Kieboom, the rookie who’s the favorite to replace Anthony Rendon at third base for the defending World Series champions, said it was his first time facing Scherzer since spring training in 2018.
“Same outcome as today,” Kieboom said. “I struck out.”
Cubs feeling fine
The Cubs have thus far avoided any positive tests, a development outfielder Kyle Schwarber insists cannot be attributed to mere luck.
“You see some names around the league who have got the virus and you’re surprised, and to see the way that we haven’t had any tests come back positive, I mean, that’s unbelievable,” Schwarber said.
Elsewhere
The defending AL champion Astros were without infielder Alex Bregman on Wednesday because his test results were delayed. “He’s probably frustrated because I know how hard Alex works and how dedicated he is to getting off to a good start,” manager Dusty Baker said. “There’s nothing that we can do about it.”
In Oakland, righthander Mike Fiers returned to the field for workouts after being delayed by what manager Bob Melvin referred to as a “pending issue,” which wasn’t injuryrelated. Fiers pitched his second career no-hitter last season and was the whistleblower in Houston’s signstealing scandal last fall.
Tampa Bay’s Charlie Morton allowed two runs and four hits over four innings in a simulated game at Tropicana Field. Lefties Blake Snell and Ryan Yarbrough, a former Old Dominion standout, and right-hander Trevor Richards also pitched.
In Atlanta, Adam Duvall launched his bid for a starting job when he hit a two-run homer to highlight the Braves’ first controlled scrimmage. Duvall’s odds at grabbing a spot in the outfield improved after Nick Markakis decided to sit out the season due to concerns about the coronavirus pandemic.