New York Post

MLB warns season may be shut down

- By JOEL SHERMAN joel.sherman@nypost.com

Commission­er Rob Manfred reached out Friday to union executive director Tony Clark to urge that a redoubling of efforts to adhere to COVID-19 safety and health protocols is necessary or shutting down the season could become a strong possibilit­y.

ESPN originally reported the conversati­on and multiple sources confirmed it for The Post.

The call between the two leaders came with 20 percent of the teams not playing Friday for COVID-19-related reasons, just a week after the regular season began. As one management person said of the need to reassert that the season is in peril without improvemen­t, “It is not earth shattering.”

The Marlins, Phil- lies, Blue Jays and Nationals already were not playing through the weekend, then Friday it was revealed that two Cardinal players had tested positive, leading to the postponeme­nt of at least Friday’s St. Louis game at Milwaukee.

MLB and the players associatio­n released the latest batch of test results Friday and there were 29 positives out of 11,895 samples and the Marlins were responsibl­e for 21, including 18 of the 20 players who tested positive. MLB has not released a reason why it believes the Marlins suffered this kind of infestatio­n, but within the game it has circulated that the leadership of the team and players were not diligent about the health and safety protocols, especially on a trip to Atlanta for two exhibition games before heading to Philadelph­ia to open the season.

The fury directed at the Marlins within the game is palpable, with the hope that their problems serve as a mandate to others about the need for discipline over the next few months when it comes to not only avoid going to public places on the road, but following protocols, for example, about high-fiving and spitting during games that are being regularly ignored.

Powerful player representa­tive Scott Boras recommende­d that each team have COVID-19 “marshals” to help educate and enforce protocols since managers and coaches are so invested in the game. In a directive this week, MLB asked each team to install a compliance officer to compel rules to be followed.

“We need the marshals to help players know what has to be done away and at the ballpark,” Boras said. “They need to be writing down protocol violations like you are sitting too close during games and then make the players aware of it.”

Boras actually was encouraged that even players who have contracted the virus have had good outcomes, he believes, because they are in a young, healthy demographi­c.

Boras also stated the protocols are working well enough that MLB should extend the season into November to allow teams to make up lost games to protect the integrity of the schedule and, more importantl­y, to better allow pitchers to prepare their bodies. Boras is worried that a shortened second spring has led to a rash of pitching injuries in the first week of the season and that slowing down and keeping the rosters at 30 players all year would work as a protective device. MLB is mulling a union request to have rosters stay at 30 players beyond the mandated first two weeks of the season.

For now, though, the strongest threat to the viability of the season is the virus. MLB continues to await test results from the Phillies (who played the Marlins last week) and the Cardinals to see if the spread is worse than was known Friday. It is in Manfred’s power to suspend or end the season at any point. He was not there yet as of Friday, but decided he needed at a fragile moment for the season to ask for further dedication to the health protocols while recognizin­g the “or else” that is in play if MLB cannot keep the virus from spreading wide within teams.

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ROB MANFRED

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