The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Hands to yourself: Complying with protocols proves difficult

- By Kyle Hightower

From players ignoring prohibitio­ns on handshakes, high-fives and hugs, to some sitting noticeably closer than six feet apart in dugouts during games, the recently launched baseball season has provided ample evidence old habits are hard to shake, even when the changes are meant to mitigate the risk of spreading the coronaviru­s.

The outbreak among Miami Marlins players has highlighte­d the major leagues’ vulnerabil­ities, though teams were already reexaminin­g approaches after the first few days of play.

“We have to do a better job,” Seattle Mariners manager Scott Servais said. “I think we’re saying all the right stuff but when you watch the games we have to do the right thing.”

Major League Baseball on Tuesday suspended the Marlins’ season through Sunday following the positive tests on the team and the Philadelph­ia Phillies, who hosted

Miami last weekend, will remain idled until Friday. It’s not clear how the virus spread among Marlins players, though the cascading postponeme­nts have focused attention on safety protocols.

Teams were aggressive in the ramp up to the season while preparing to return to the field during the pandemic. Having players dress outside of cramped clubhouses, utilizing empty stands as auxiliary dugout space, giving players the option to wear masks during games and restrictin­g sports reporters’ access to team personnel are the new normal around the league.

But they haven’t been able to totally curb players’ natural tendencies to engage in physical contact during the ebb and flow of actual games.

In Oakland, a series between the Athletics and visiting Angels featured several instances of suspect social distancing. One of the most glaring was on Friday when A’s players swarmed Matt Olson after a game-ending grand slam in the 10th inning that punctuated their 7-3 win.

“Instinctua­lly you want to celebrate a big win like that, so I think you try to progress,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said. “I’m on record saying it’s not going to be perfect at the beginning and maybe something like this that’s going on with the Marlins creates more awareness and more caution as far as that goes. If that’s the case, then it’s probably a good thing.”

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