USA TODAY International Edition

MLB’s ‘ most anticipate­d opening day’ ever is here

- Bob Nightengal­e Columnist USA TODAY

After a shortened 2020 season, Major League Baseball has a full 162- game schedule.

DENVER – There will be no downtown parades with high school marching bands. No traditiona­l sellout crowds outside the state of Texas. No beer and hot dog vendors roaming the stadium aisles. No cash, credit cards only. And no masks, no admittance.

Different norms, for sure, but Major League Baseball’s opening day Thursday has never been so beautiful.

There’s a 162- game schedule – 102 more than a year ago.

There will be a DH in the American League and not in the National League, just as it has been since 1973.

There will be three divisional winners and two wild- card teams making the playoffs from each league just as it has been since 2012, but expanded to a 16- team field a year ago.

Finally, a dose of normalcy, and it has never felt so good.

“I have never seen the kind of anticipati­on for an opening day that I sense with respect to this one,” Commission­er

Rob Manfred told USA TODAY Sports. “It’s the most anticipate­d opening day I’ve ever seen. I have to tell you the idea being back, looking at a full 162- game season, with at least some fans in the ballpark, I could not be more excited.”

It’s no different than with the players, who spent all last season talking about how cold and unemotiona­l it felt without the fans, questionin­g whether it even felt like a real season.

“It’s definitely exciting,” said Mets ace Jacob deGrom, who will be facing Max Scherzer of the Nationals on Thurs

day. “Last year, no one really knew what to expect. You came in, had a month to get ready, you then play a short season. We’re trained to play 162, and hopefully play more than that. We’re excited to have fans back in the stands and get that going.”

Spring training tickets were selling for nearly $ 200 in the Cactus League, despite games lasting as few as five innings and funky rules.

“I just think people want to be back at the game,” Manfred said. “They are really anticipati­ng being back in the ballpark.”

There’s growing optimism in the game, and really across the country, that things could feel quasi- normal by midsummer.

“We hope to have a sense of normalcy sooner than later based on the trends that we are seeing,” said Tony Clark, executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n.

Teams, beginning with the Astros and Cardinals on Monday, have already begun mass vaccinatio­ns. Most teams will follow suit. The vaccinatio­ns aren’t mandatory, but if 85% of the teams’ players and staff get the shots, those safety and health protocols will be removed, enabling players to dine together again, have their families join them on the road, and go back to playing cards and video games together in clubhouses.

“That’s an individual decision. I would never force anyone to do that,” Phillies President Dave Dombrowski said. “However, I would point out, we would point out, players would probably point out, that if we get to 85%, their lives change dramatical­ly as far as travel is concerned.”

Said Cardinals President John Mozeliak: “I’m hopeful people will do it, because the more vaccines that go into arms, ultimately the more freedom or normalcy we’ll be able to experience.”

The Cardinals were shut down for 19 days last summer when 10 players and eight staff members tested positive for COVID- 19, so even if they do reach the 85% threshold, they’re not about to hit the streets without masks.

“It doesn’t mean you can relax the protocols or put your guard down,” Mozeliak said. “I do feel being down here in Florida ( during spring training) there’s this sense that the pandemic is behind us. I don’t think that’s a healthy mentality yet.”

Case in point was when the Nationals discovered Wednesday that one of their players tested positive for COVID- 19 and another four players and a staffer need to quarantine because of contact tracing, making them inactive opening night.

MLB players certainly showed their resolve and discipline this spring, silencing the notion that the season needed to be pushed back a month. Only 12 players and five staff members tested positive for COVID- 19 after reporting to camp, among the 72,751 tests.

“The players and their families have been outstandin­g,” Clark told USA TODAY Sports, “understand­ing the importance of the need for the protocols and obviously wanting to play and have the season start on time and continue as scheduled. The guys committed to it, and helped each other stay accountabl­e.

“We still have some challenges and concerns, and the diligence is going to have to continue. But the position the guys took with an eye on playing a full season over a full slate of days rather than a shortened window was the right position to take.”

Said Manfred: “I cannot say enough about what the players and club personnel did during spring training. They did a phenomenal job to get us through 60 ( games) last year, and I think they were even better and more careful in spring training.”

There will be obstacles. Pitchers who haven’t picked up a bat in 1 1⁄ years now

2 will be required to hit in the NL. Minor leaguers who didn’t play a single game last season, like Andrew Vaughn of the White Sox, now will be playing integral roles in the big leagues. And who knows how home run hitters will react with the modification in baseballs after a record 6,776 homers were hit in 2019.

The players union still wishes that a universal DH was implemente­d this season considerin­g it will likely be around to stay in 2022. MLB offered a universal DH during the winter in exchange for an expanded postseason with 14 teams. The union soundly rejected the proposal. There were no counteroffers. The subject was never revisited.

“The position we’ve taken since Day 1 on the DH issue is that it’s a health and safety issue,” Clark said. “So that concern remains.”

While the conflict and distrust between the union and MLB is ugly, and the potential of the first work stoppage since 1994 looms in the winter, there’s a full, unadultera­ted 162- game season to play first.

There will be fans at ballparks, with the capacity increasing each month. Revenue for clubs will grow. Players will be paid full salaries again. Fans will be cheering their favorite teams and players. They’ll be booing the Astros. And they’ll be screaming and cursing at the umpiring crew and instant replay results.

Yep, just like old times.

“I really don’t believe that our players ever took the fans for granted,” Manfred said, “but I am a believer in the adage that absence makes the heart grow fonder. I think playing for the first time ever without fans that it reminded everybody how important fans are to the atmosphere in the ballpark.”

And after playing the shortest season since 1878, turning a marathon into a sprint, maybe there will be a deeper appreciati­on of the grueling sport.

“It is a separator and why baseball is the national pastime,” Maddon said. “You come home from work any day during the summer and either put the radio on or watch TV and see your favorite team play. And then there’s all this stir about that night, that game, your favorite player, your favorite team, what’s going on, and you can do that every night during the summer. Every night. You start in school, go through the summer, go back to school, and it’s still going on.”

Baseball, in almost its pure and natural version ( there still will be seven- inning doublehead­ers and a runner starting on second base in extra innings), is finally back.

The two most beautiful words in the sport will never be so passionate­ly embraced on opening day:

“Play ball.”

 ?? SAM GREENE/ THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER ?? The main gates are prepared Monday for opening day at Great American Ball Park in downtown Cincinnati. The Reds introduced a number of new amenities, concession­s and COVID- 19 related regulation­s.
SAM GREENE/ THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER The main gates are prepared Monday for opening day at Great American Ball Park in downtown Cincinnati. The Reds introduced a number of new amenities, concession­s and COVID- 19 related regulation­s.
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