Santa Fe New Mexican

Positive virus tests throw wrench into MLB season negotiatio­ns

Eight people with Phillies test positive, throwing wrench into already tense season talks

- By Dave Sheinin

On what might have been the bleakest day of an exceedingl­y bleak spring for Major League Baseball, the league effectivel­y halted negotiatio­ns with the union over the economic terms of the 2020 season — and that didn’t even constitute the worst news on a day that also saw the coronaviru­s pandemic assert its ultimate dominion over the entire endeavor.

While the afternoon hours Friday were consumed with the sobering news that five players and three staff members of the Philadelph­ia Phillies at the team’s spring headquarte­rs in Clearwater, Fla., had tested positive for COVID-19 — leading to the closing of the team’s facilities, and an expansion of testing and contact tracing for other personnel on site — the evening brought a statement from the union that signaled the endgame had arrived for the bitter, months-long negotiatio­n over the 2020 schedule.

What we’re left with: The last resort for MLB to salvage a 2020 season would be to impose a 50-game, late-summer mini-season and hope even that can be pulled off amid a worsening public-health crisis that has already shown up across big league organizati­ons.

“MLB has informed the Associatio­n that it will not respond to our last proposal and will not play more than 60 games,” the union said in a statement Friday night. “Our Executive Board will convene in the near future to determine next steps. Importantl­y, Players remain committed to getting back to work as soon as possible.”

But the apparent finale of the economic negotiatio­n — which found the sides stuck with a 10-game gap between the union’s last proposal for 70 games and the league’s pitch for 60 — was not even the worst developmen­t for the sport’s hopes of taking the field in 2020.

Friday’s news out of the Phillies’ camp, the first known outbreak of COVID-19 for an MLB team, may not have doomed the 2020 baseball season, but it was enough of a setback to call into question the likelihood of finding a feasible path — with or without a deal on economics — through the pandemic.

It was also a sobering reminder of how difficult it will be for any team sport, baseball included, to pull off any sort of schedule amid this global pandemic. While the league and union haggle over the terms of the season, and the money each side receives, it is the virus that ultimately will decide how much — or whether — baseball will be played in 2020.

The extent of the Phillies outbreak, the news of which was first reported by NBC Sports Philadelph­ia and later confirmed by the team, was unknown. The eight positive tests came from a batch of 16 total tests, and another 32 employees, including 20 major and minor league players, were awaiting results. None of the affected personnel was identified. Additional testing had been done on families of those potentiall­y infected, and contact tracing was underway.

The Toronto Blue Jays also shut down their spring training headquarte­rs in Dunedin, Fla., after a player exhibited COVID-19 symptoms. According to ESPN, the Blue Jays player in question had spent time with players in the Phillies’ minor league system. In addition, the Houston Astros confirmed reports that a player on its 40-man roster had tested positive.

Personnel from teams across the sport had been mobilizing in recent days, with the potential that an economic deal by the end of the weekend could result in camps opening next week — beginning with mandatory coronaviru­s tests for all personnel — either at spring training hubs in Arizona and Florida or in teams’ regular-season home cities. The mobilizati­on was triggered in part by Commission­er Rob Manfred’s declaratio­n June 10 that there “unequivoca­lly” would be a 2020 baseball season — comments he backed off five days later.

But within an exchange of angry letters between MLB and union lawyers last weekend, as the tenor of the negotiatio­ns grew more strained and bitter, came the revelation that “several” big league players and staff had tested positive. It was unclear whether any of those cases stemmed from the Phillies.

“The proliferat­ion of COVID-19 outbreaks across the country over the last week, and the fact that we already know of several 40-man roster players and staff who have tested positive, has increased the risks associated with commencing spring training in the next few weeks,” MLB deputy commission­er Dan Halem wrote to the union in a letter Monday.

MLB has been focused on a plan for teams to play at their home stadiums wherever possible, and with teams grouped geographic­ally to cut down on travel. This stands in opposition to the plans being pursued by the NHL, NBA, WNBA and MLS to operate in protective, quarantine­d “bubbles” in one location.

Wwith the battle over the division of money in 2020 now apparently over, MLB is left to decide whether it wants to impose a mini-season, leaving itself open to a $1 billion grievance the union would almost certainly file, or use the spread of the virus across the game’s ranks as a reason to punt on 2020 entirely.

At the same time, the players have the choice between accepting MLB’s latest proposal for a 60-game season — which would come with an expanded postseason and an agreement to waive potential grievances — or rejecting the proposal and accepting whatever imposed schedule, likely in the 50-game range, the league comes up with. MLB declined to counter the union’s 70-game proposal.

MLB has remained adamant any plan for a 2020 regular season must conclude by the end of September, so that the postseason can be contained within October, due to fears a second wave of coronaviru­s in the fall could force the postseason’s cancellati­on and deprive the sport of its lucrative television revenue.

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 ?? MATT ROURKE/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Phillies fans gather for Opening Day in 2019 with the Braves in Philadelph­ia. Five players and three staffers have tested positive for COVID-19 at the team’s spring camp in Florida, prompting the club to close the complex.
MATT ROURKE/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Phillies fans gather for Opening Day in 2019 with the Braves in Philadelph­ia. Five players and three staffers have tested positive for COVID-19 at the team’s spring camp in Florida, prompting the club to close the complex.

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