Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Blue Jays will play home games in Buffalo

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The displaced Toronto Blue Jays will play in a minor league park in Buffalo, New York, this year after being turned down by the Canadian government and blocked to play in Pittsburgh by the state of Pennsylvan­ia.

The Blue Jays will play “home games” at Sahlen Field in Buffalo, home of the club’s Class AAA affiliate Buffalo Bisons. General manager Ross Atkins had previously said that if team could not find a major league park, Buffalo would be the most likely site for home games.

The team sought a major league stadium after the Canadian government declined to allow them to play in Toronto but was unsuccessf­ul. Pennsylvan­ia health officials then rejected a deal to play in Pittsburgh because of rising COVID-19 cases there.

The team also held talks with the Baltimore Orioles about Camden Yards, but the Blue Jays didn’t want to wait to see if Maryland officials would say no with the season starting Friday.

“Baltimore never got to a situation to where we were denied,” Blue Jays President Mark Shapiro said Friday. “At some point continuing to explore and look at an option like Baltimore was not going to be a risk we could take. That risk of being turned down certainly existed. And so we obviously had to make a decision knowing we had a very good alternativ­e, albeit not a major league one. but one we felt could get close to a major league one.”

Toronto opens the season at Tampa Bay on Friday. The team said the first scheduled home series, against the Washington Nationals on July 29 and 30, will take place on the road to accommodat­e infrastruc­ture modifications at Sahlen Field to meet Major League Baseball standards and COVID-19 safety requiremen­ts.

The Blue Jays’ first game in Buffalo will be either July 31 against the Philadelph­ia Phillies or Aug. 11 against the Miami Marlins.

Blue Jays players had made it clear to the front office they wanted to play in a major league park. Outfielder Randal Grichuk had described Buffalo as a “worst case.”

Braves play without top two catchers: The Atlanta Braves were without their top two catchers, Tyler Flowers and Travis d’Arnaud, for Friday’s opening game at the New York Mets after both players showed symptoms of the coronaviru­s.

Manager Brian Snitker said that Flowers and d’Arnaud have tested negative for the coronaviru­s but did not travel with the team because they had symptoms.

Snitker said the team is being careful because “we’ve had guys test negative and the next day they test positive.”

First baseman Freddie Freeman and right-hander Touki Toussaint are back with the team and on the opening-day roster after testing positive.

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