USA TODAY International Edition

MLB fans return as 4th wave threatens

- Jim Sergent, Gabe Lacques and Mike Stucka

As scientists raise concerns about a potential fourth COVID- 19 wave, MLB teams will open their gates to fans beginning Thursday.

The majority will start the regular season with their stadiums at 20% to 30% capacity, allowing groups to socially distance in the stands. Some are even more conservati­ve: The Nationals, Red Sox and Blue Jays will allow 5,000, 4,500 and 1,275 fans, respective­ly.

Many have April 5 circled on their calendars: when the Rangers plan to open all 40,300 seats to fans – a decision announced the day the state’s face mask requiremen­t was lifted.

“The Rangers are encouraged that the Governor’s Office has given clearance for us to fully open Globe Life Field at the start of the 2021 Major League Baseball season,” Neil Leibman, the Rangers’ president of business operations and chief operating officer, said in a statement.

The Rangers said they will reduce capacity slightly after the opening- day excitement wanes, offering socially distanced seating in four sections.

How many fans each MLB team will allow on opening day

COVID- 19 infection rates in each of the counties where the 30 MLB teams play are down substantia­lly from their peaks. Many hit their highs in January but ticked up in the past week.

Experts worry that a combinatio­n of spring break and complacenc­y could lead to a fourth wave of infections across the country. “We’re skating on a knife’s edge right now,” said Nicholas Reich, a biostatist­ician at the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst.

Rather than look at the state of infections in the abstract with rates per 100,000 residents, perhaps it’s easier to grasp in the context of a baseball stadium. Considerin­g it can take several days for people to recognize they’re contagious – if they ever do – we have used weekly new infections throughout.

The average MLB stadium holds about 40,000 people. At its peak, 112,542 Los Angeles County residents contracted COVID- 19 infections on a weekly basis. That’s almost 450 people in a 40,000- seat stadium – 561 in Dodgers Stadium, the largest in the MLB.

COVID- 19 infection rates in counties with MLB teams

Even under the substantia­lly lower infection rates, the possibilit­y of coming into contact with a recently infected person remains.

Consider the Rangers’ Globe Life Field in Tarrant County. At the county’s peak in January, a filled stadium – on average – would have had 375 recently infected fans inside. Based on March 29’ s weekly rate, 26 recently infected fans could be walking among the other spectators on opening day.

Should infection rates or hospitaliz­ations rise to more worrisome levels, MLB said it will defer to local health officials to determine appropriat­e stadium capacities in their markets.

Tarrant County reports a “substantia­l” level of community spread on its COVID- 19 dashboard; the seven- day average of test positivity is 6%, down from a peak of 30% in January but worse than the 5% mark public health experts often cite as a bench mark to loosen many restrictio­ns.

“With all the protocols that we’re following, we’ll be extremely responsibl­e and provide a very comfortabl­e environmen­t for somebody to enjoy the game without worrying we’re going to be a

spreader event,” the Rangers’ Leibman told The Associated Press.

These protocols could fall short on a couple of counts: eating and drinking and social distancing.

Globe Life Field hosted a playoff round and the World Series in front of more than 11,000 spectators last fall. Many fans used the “except when actively eating and drinking“loophole.

It’s a surefire way to reduce a mask’s efficacy, public health experts say.

“If you make an exception for booze, and everyone is drinking booze, then there’s no mask,” Will Humble, executive director of the Arizona Public Health Associatio­n, told USA TODAY Sports in January.

The CDC tweaked its guidance for outdoor activities in mid- February, but a core element remains: Stay at least 6 feet away from others who don’t live with you, including people at outdoor events. That’s going to be difficult in many of the stadium’s sections that are completely or mostly filled with fans sitting shoulder to shoulder.

Elements the CDC says make outdoor events increasing­ly risky

The CDC underscore­s the importance of clearly communicat­ing these or similar guidelines to fans and reiteratin­g them throughout an event.

A study of English sporting events from July 26 to Oct. 3, 2020, found “providing clear and actionable informatio­n about how to follow safety measures” made fans feel safer and more likely to adhere to the guidelines.

For those who question all the machinatio­ns required to bring fans back into stadiums and the potential risks involved while a pandemic still rages, the survey reminds us that sports are not just games.

Respondent­s said they saw the games as a chance to retain “some normality back to my life,” get “a massive lift to mental health” and experience “a sense of community.”

Regardless of the inherent risks of attending a packed house on opening day, Rangers fans appear to agree. The least expensive ticket available via the Rangers box office Tuesday was $ 90; most were in the triple digits. On the secondary market, tickets start in the low $ 70 range from StubHub and SeatGeek.

A Washington Post- University of Maryland poll released Wednesday suggests that two- thirds of Americans “feel comfortabl­e attending a ticketed sporting event” when the event is outdoors, masks are required and stadium capacity is restricted.

The CDC makes it clear the safest option for fans this spring is watching any sporting event with those in your bubble at home.

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