The Borneo Post

Trump eager to ‘get sports back’ as league chiefs remain wary

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump is hankering for a return of live sports action, but US league supremos are taking a cautious approach to competitio­n amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“We have to get our sports back,” Trump said Tuesday.

“I’m tired of watching baseball games that are 14 years old.”

Sports in America, like the rest of the world, have been brought to a virtual standstill by Covid19.

The NBA shut down on March 11 after Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert tested positive for the virus, and the NHL, Major League Soccer and the US PGA Tour quickly followed suit.

Major League Baseball’s 2020 season, due to start March 26, is on hold, as is the LPGA tour and motor racing, while the NFL is just hoping it will be able to start its season on time in September.

The dearth of sports has led to a wealth of speculatio­n as to when and how competitio­n could resume.

The NBA and NHL are wrestling with how they might fashion credible ends to campaigns that were heading into their final stages.

Baseball, meanwhile, was reported to be considerin­g sequesteri­ng 30 teams in Arizona – or perhaps Arizona and Florida

– to open the season playing games in empty ballparks.

One ESPN reporter said he’d even heard it suggested that MLB might try to launch its season in Japan.

The NHL was reportedly mulling a single-venue re-start in North Dakota, while Dana White, head of the Ultimate Fighting Championsh­ip, indicated he was considerin­g holding mixed martial arts cards on a private island.

“From our perspectiv­e we don’t have a plan, we have lots of ideas,” MLB commission­er Rob Manfred said in a television interview on Tuesday.

“What ideas come to fruition will depend on what the restrictio­ns are, what the public health situation is.”

His comments echoed those of NHL commission­er Gary Bettman and NBA commission­er Adam Silver, who have both said that the uncertaint­ies surroundin­g the spread of coronaviru­s make it impossible to make firm plans.

The refrain of all sports leaders has therefore been they are considerin­g “all options,” including playing without fans in attendance.

That could get live sports back on television, at least, although Trump indicated that he’s keen for more.

“We want people actually sitting next to each other at ball games, eventually,” he said.

“We’re not going to rip out every other seat in baseball stadiums and football stadiums.”

In the United States, however, the return of thousands of fans to sports venues could depend on the greenlight from state authoritie­s.

-‘ Not in the cards’ - California governor Gavin Newsom said Tuesday that the prospect of mass gatherings in the state is “negligible at best” until a vaccine is available.

In a state that is home to nearly 20 major pro franchises, Newsom said that “large-scale events that bring in hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands of strangers altogether across every conceivabl­e difference, health and otherwise, is not in the cards based upon our current guidelines and current expectatio­ns.”

That may be just as well, since a poll conducted by Seton Hall University this month showed that 72 percent of the 762 responding, including 61 per cent who identified as sports fans, would not feel safe attending sports events until a coronaviru­s vaccine is found.

Some inroads may be possible however, as Florida governor Ron DeSantis – a staunch Trump ally – showed in issuing an executive order specifying that “employees at a profession­al sports and media production with a national audience” counted among “essential services” not subject to stay at home orders in his state.

That opened the door for World Wrestling Entertainm­ent – run by another Trump friend Vince McMahon – to resume live broadcasts of events on Monday from an Orlando studio facility.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Juan Soto of the Washington Nationals reacts in the dugout against the New York Yankees in the bottom of the fourth inning of a Grapefruit League spring training game at FITTEAM Ballpark of The Palm Beaches in West Palm Beach, Florida in this March 19 file photo.
— AFP photo Juan Soto of the Washington Nationals reacts in the dugout against the New York Yankees in the bottom of the fourth inning of a Grapefruit League spring training game at FITTEAM Ballpark of The Palm Beaches in West Palm Beach, Florida in this March 19 file photo.
 ??  ?? Donald Trump
Donald Trump

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