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MLS, union at odds on whether season start should be delayed

- Bob Nightengal­e Columnist USA TODAY

Bob Nightengal­e column: Owners want to wait until players and staff are vaccinated.

MLB executives and owners, wanting players to be vaccinated before arriving to spring training, would like the 2021 season to be delayed until May, even if it means shortening the season to 140 or fewer games. The Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n, believing it proved that teams can safely adapt to protocols, wants the season to start on time, playing all 162 games with full pay.

Here we are, with two months before pitchers and catchers are scheduled to report for spring training, and no one has any idea what will happen.

COVID-19 cases are raging across the country this winter, but the vaccine is starting to be distribute­d, giving hope that by midsummer most everyone will have access to the immunizati­on.

“I don’t see a snowball’s chance in hell that spring training can start with protocols in place,” a National League owner told USA TODAY on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the issue. “I think there will be significan­t pressure for players to get the vaccine first before they go to spring training, and if that has to be moved back to April and play 130 games, so be it. But to have 162 games, and start spring training at the normal time without players being vaccinated, that’s just crazy. Does Arizona and Florida, with their cases spiking, really want teams with about 125 people in each organizati­on coming to town without vaccines?”

Said an American League owner who also requested anonymity: “I don’t see any way spring training starts in February. Zero chance of that. I don’t care if we play 140 games, 120 games or 80 games, we have to make sure everyone is safe to do this right.” Yet with every day lost on the schedule, players will lose about $25 million in salaries. In a 2020 60-game season that started July 23, they were paid 33% of their salaries. The union doesn’t have the appetite for another pay cut, saying it proved the players can abide by the safety protocols.

“Knowing what I know about last season,” Diamondbac­ks manager Torey Lovullo said, “I feel that the 2021 season can be played in full. I’m hopeful for that. I’m just proud of everyone in the industry, from top to bottom, made that adjustment and made it work. We got to the finish line, there was a world champion for the 2020 season. I want us to explore the best possible options to play a full schedule and spring training.”

Still, while the season might have been completed just in the nick of time, with Dodgers star Justin Turner testing positive for COVID-19 during the final game of the World Series, there were also $3 billion in losses by clubs, according to Commission­er Rob Manfred.

No fans were permitted in ballparks until the NL Championsh­ip Series in Texas. About 11,500 fans were allowed for the NLCS and the World Series.

It’s unknown when fans will be permitted into stadiums or how limited the restrictio­ns will be in different municipali­ties. No team is selling spring training tickets. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said stadiums likely won’t be able to sell tickets without restrictio­ns until the end of the summer when most fans get vaccinated.

There have been no polls or surveys among players whether they are willing to delay the season until they are vaccinated. Yet just like this past season when players forfeited their salaries and opted out of playing, there are those who might want to be cautious to protect their families.

“I would love for everyone in MLB to be able to get the vaccine for sure,” said Dodgers starter David Price, who opted out of playing last season. “If that means starting later, then so be it. Hearing everyone talk about how taxing all of that was last year just to play isn’t something I think everyone wants to go through again.”

The ideal scenario, several players say, would be to delay the season for everyone to be vaccinated but to extend it a month so a full season can be played with everyone still receiving their full salary. Owners call it unrealisti­c to play a World Series in late November or December and that it would still result in massive revenue losses for teams with restricted or no fans.

If they continue to disagree on the season’s length, it’s unknown whether MLB has the stomach for another labor dispute in the final year of the collective bargaining agreement, which expires Dec. 1, 2021.

Meanwhile, the baseball world waits. Players are hesitant to place deposits for spring training housing not knowing whether they’ll be reporting in mid-February or six weeks later. The outcome could be removed from baseball’s hands if the government­s in Arizona and Florida place restrictio­ns, just like in California with Santa Clara County banning all contact sports, forcing the San Francisco 49ers away from Levi’s Stadium.

“We just have to see after the first of the year,” Astros manager Dusty Baker said. “We don’t even know when we’re going to spring training. We don’t know whether we play 162 or 140. There’s a lot of stuff up in the air with the COVID situation. We’re just going to have to wait and see like everyone else.”

 ?? KIRBY LEE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? During the abbreviate­d 2020 MLB season, players and coaches such as Dodgers pitcher Walker Buehler, right, and special assistant of baseball operations Joe Vizcaino wore face masks.
KIRBY LEE/USA TODAY SPORTS During the abbreviate­d 2020 MLB season, players and coaches such as Dodgers pitcher Walker Buehler, right, and special assistant of baseball operations Joe Vizcaino wore face masks.
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