The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

McCaffery

- To contact Jack McCaffery, email him at jmccaffery@21stcentur­ymedia.com; follow him on Twitter @ JackMcCaff­ery

utes to take one player off the field and wave in another. Everything is slow. Yet if the two-month delay in opening the season has provided baseball with anything, it has been an opportunit­y. For whenever the “Play ball” order is barked, baseball should be immediatel­y ready to comply while also being in compliance with any health orders, reasonable or otherwise.

Quietly, that ramp-up is occurring.

Rob Manfred, the commission­er, held a video meeting with the owners Monday, outlining a financial plan to resume play. By Tuesday, plan to resume a season around the Fourth of July weekend was presented to the Players Associatio­n. By Wednesday, probably, the union would snort at some of the proposals. It’s the usual labormanag­ement dance. But eventually, they will all be doing the Twist, having figured out how to share the billions and how often the players have to put in hard labor in a week.

When that arguing is over, figure the players to agree to a temporary revenue-sharing

plan, at least for this season, and that they will win a substantia­lly higher portion of the profits than the 49 percent proposed by the owners, according to a report. Neither side can afford to appear greedy at a time when so many are out of work. There is a number they can agree on. And they will.

But what about the games? How will they look? Well, the Korean League is providing a preview.

At least until it is ruled safe to do otherwise, the games are being played in ballparks that are essentiall­y empty. Odd? A little. But not horrifying. The baseball business model accepts the reality that home run balls often will sail into empty sections of seats. So visually, at least, it is not jolting.

Less immediatel­y visible, yet 125 years overdue whether there was a virus crisis or not, the Korean players are being made to show better manners. That includes forbidding the participan­ts from …. wait for it … spitting all over the workplace. Imagine that. Everyone has some regrettabl­e habits. But that culture of taking a lung-clearing hocker every third pitch while soaking bullpens, dugouts, bases and equipment in germs is unique to baseball and needed to be stopped 11 million barrels of potentiall­y disease-transporti­ng saliva ago.

Also being discourage­d are over-used handshakes and high-fives. Ultimately, such spontaneou­s expression­s of joy must be allowed. But if replacing the handshake line with some informal elbow bumps hastens the return of an industry that employs thousands, it’s a reasonable price.

Korean players are also being tested, re-tested, and tested some more for signs of a coronaviru­s. And why not? While testing procedures will have to be formalized and medical supplies stockpiled, Major League Baseball has had sufficient time to meet those obligation­s.

Once the new health standards are in place, baseball can figure out how to conduct a season. Multiple reports are that the traditiona­l National and American Leagues will be preserved, contrary to a revolting plan floated earlier to mingle the franchises in three 10-team monstrosit­ies. However, because the season likely will be shortened to about 82 games, or the length of an NBA or NHL season, there will be less travel and more inter-league play based on geography. The NL East teams, then, could expect to regularly face AL East teams. The same would go for the Central and West divisions. So it will be more likely for the Phillies to play in Baltimore, Boston and Yankee

Stadium than in San Diego, San Francisco or Dodger Stadium.

With more crossover games and rosters expanded to lessen stress on pitchers having not been sufficient­ly conditione­d for a quick re-start, that will mean the designated hitter will be approved for all major league games. Once that happens, figure it to become permanent. Baseball has been looking for a way to correct that imbalance for years without being accused of straying too far from the original rules of the game. The pandemic has provided that escape route.

It’s all going to happen, the revenue sharing, the sparse crowds, the players refraining from spitting, the elbow bumps, the DH, a likely expansion of the postseason and, most important, the baseball.

It’s going to happen because it is time.

And it is going to happen because every night, from Seoul to Daejeon to Incheon, it is being shown how it all can safely be possible.

 ?? MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO ?? Central Bucks West’s Thomas Philipps misses the tag on LaSalle’s Andrew Cosetti at first base in Carpenter Cup action. Carpenter Cup officials canceled the 2020baseba­ll and softball tournament­s due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.
MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO Central Bucks West’s Thomas Philipps misses the tag on LaSalle’s Andrew Cosetti at first base in Carpenter Cup action. Carpenter Cup officials canceled the 2020baseba­ll and softball tournament­s due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.
 ?? PETE BANNAN — MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Delaware County outfielder Darran Hagan of Garnet Valley goes airborne to snag a line drive against Berks County in the Carpenter Cup last year. Carpenter Cup officials canceled the 2020 baseball and softball tournament­s due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.
PETE BANNAN — MEDIANEWS GROUP Delaware County outfielder Darran Hagan of Garnet Valley goes airborne to snag a line drive against Berks County in the Carpenter Cup last year. Carpenter Cup officials canceled the 2020 baseball and softball tournament­s due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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