New York Daily News

Call it? They won’t mind

Unlike Yanks and Dodgers, some would welcome canceled season

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We are not going to know for a long time when the baseball season is ever going to start — if ever. Amid some prediction­s the country could still be in the grips of the coronaviru­s into midsummer, we cannot rule out the possibilit­y there may be no baseball season at all this year.

If that turns out to be case, then what?

Believe it or not, there are some clubs who probably wouldn’t mind a bit if 2020 came and went without having to put their teams on the field. Teams like the Yankees, who paid $324 million to one pitcher alone to assure themselves a World Series, and the Dodgers, who added free agent-to-be Mookie Betts to a team that won 106 games last year, were heavily invested in the 2020 season. Those teams in no way want to see it get banged.

The Braves, Nationals and Mets were looking forward to battling it out in the most competitiv­e division in baseball. The White Sox were eager to display their rookie wunderkind center fielder, Luis Robert, and the Cardinals always contend for the most fervid fan base in the sport. They were all looking forward to this season.

But because there is still so much competitiv­e imbalance in baseball, there are far more teams — the Red Sox, Orioles, Rockies, Giants, Pirates and Marlins to name a few — that could just as well do without a season. They had no chance of contending, and attendance was likely to hemorrhage. And then there are the Astros, who took a beating from the fans all spring and for sure had to welcome the abrupt cancellati­on of spring training.

Taking them one at a time:

HOUSTON ASTROS

It was a brutal spring for the cheating Astros. Everywhere they went they were booed lustily, especially Jose Altuve and Alex Bregman, who heard it even in their home ballpark in West Palm Beach. Dusty Baker, the resident Astros caretaker, confided to me his genuine surprise at the overall anger at his team. Presumably, a year from now, after the nation has endured the horror of this coronaviru­s, the Astros cheating scandal will be last thing on fans’ minds.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS

A veteran baseball man who saw a lot of the Giants this spring and labeled them by far the worst team in the Cactus

League, had this observatio­n: “How do you trade Brian Sabean and Bruce Bochy, who won three world championsh­ips and are both going to the Hall of Fame, for Farhan Zaidi and Gabe Kapler? That’s like trading Lou Brock for Ernie Broglio!”

Zaidi, the consummate analytics man, hired Kapler, a dismal failure in Philadelph­ia, because he was familiar with him and wanted to get away from “old school” types like Bochy. Having decided to let their lone gate attraction, Madison Bumgarner, go, they were looking at a lot more than 85 losses in 2020.

BOSTON RED SOX

Have to think nobody in baseball is more relieved to see the season delayed than Sox owner John Henry, who was dreading having to hear the Boston media and Fenway fans wailing and moaning every day the Red Sox lost and Betts did something to win a game for the Dodgers.

In that respect, the secondmost relieved person in Boston was Alex Verdugo, who, a year from now, may be forgotten as the principal return from the Dodgers for Betts. Henry refused to admit the Red Sox are downsizing, but believe it, they were looking at a losing season even before Chris Sale went down with Tommy John surgery. At least now, they might get him back some time next year.

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

It was entirely possible the worst-run team in baseball could have actually surpassed the 108 losses they endured last season. Their best player, Trey Mancini, underwent colon cancer surgery two weeks ago and there was no indication as to when he would be able to play again. Their other best player last year, Jonathan Villar, was traded to the Marlins for a low-A nonprospec­t pitcher in a salary dump.

The GM, Mike Elias, who was Jeff Luhnow’s right-hand man in Houston and right in the middle of the cheating scandal but never charged, is way over his shoes. One of the new minor league coaches he hired reportedly had to be moved to the sidelines in spring training, when he couldn’t hit fungoes and, in attempting to throw batting practice, threw a bunch of pitches in the dirt before hitting the batter in the head. Ah, those analytics guys who never played the game.

SAN DIEGO PADRES

There is perhaps no more endangered GM in baseball than A.J. Preller, who heard it from Padres chairman Ron Fowler after last year’s 70-92 last-place finish that another losing season in San Diego would not be acceptable.

MIAMI MARLINS

The day before Rob Manfred pulled the plug on spring training, a Marlins scout said to me: “I just hope they’ll give us one more year of patience.” He was referring to Marlins CEO Derek Jeter’s second annual decree that he needs to see improvemen­t this year. Jeter said the same thing last year and the Marlins responded by going from 63-98 to 57-105. Even though they finally added a little payroll by acquiring Villar from the Orioles and signing muchtravel­ed outfielder Corey Dickerson as a free agent, the Marlins have almost no pitching and were once again certain to finish last in the highly competitiv­e NL East, with the lowest attendance in baseball again.

COLORADO ROCKIES

What was shaping up as the summer of discontent for Rockies superstar third baseman Nolan Arenado now at least gives the team more time to trade him. Then he won’t have to be part of an even worse season than last year’s 71-91 campaign.

 ??  ?? The Houston Astros were the talk of baseball, and not in a good way, before the world changed with the coronaviru­s outbreak. AP
The Houston Astros were the talk of baseball, and not in a good way, before the world changed with the coronaviru­s outbreak. AP

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