New York Daily News

MLB considerin­g all-Arizona season

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Putting all 30 teams in the Phoenix area and playing in empty ballparks was among the ideas discussed Monday by Major League Baseball and the players' associatio­n.

The sides held a telephone call to talk about paths forward for a season delayed by the new coronaviru­s pandemic.

Ideas are still in the early stage, and the Arizona option would have many obstacles to overcome.

Arizona's advantage is 10 spring training ballparks plus the Arizona Diamondbac­ks' Chase

Field all within about 50 miles. Florida's spring training ballparks are spread by as much as 220 miles.

“It allows for immediacy of a schedule, where you might be able to begin it and televise it, provide Major League Baseball to America,” said Scott Boras, baseball's most prominent agent. “I think players are willing to do what's necessary because I think they understand the importance of baseball for their own livelihood­s and for the interest of our country and providing a necessary product that gives

all the people that are isolated enjoyment.

“It gives them a sense of a return to some normalcy,” Boras added.

Baseball's season had been set to start March 26 but spring training was halted on March 12. After the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommende­d restrictin­g events of more than 50 people for eight weeks, MLB said it would not open until mid-May at the earliest.

Texas Rangers president of baseball operations Jon Daniels said MLB is examining different options.

“But, obviously, we'd all love to find a way to play, provided we could do safely, and that would be the priority,” he said.

The players' associatio­n would want to survey its members to determine whether they would support such a plan, one of the people said.

“You're going to be largely separated from your families and you're going to have to function in a very contained way. It's not it's not a normal life, this idea,” Boras said.

Chase Field, with a retractabl­e roof, could be the site of daily triplehead­ers, Boras said.

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