Daily Press

Sports leagues seek return but offer no guarantees

- By Eddie Pells Associated Press

With no games being played, recent sports headlines have centered around hopes and dreams — namely, the uncharted path that leagues and teams must navigate to return to competitio­n in the wake of the pandemic.

Virtually all leagues talk publicly about their desire to return before summer. But behind closed doors, they are hatching different potential plans: all 30 baseball teams playing in Arizona; home run contests to decide tie games; the Stanley Cup being hoisted in an empty arena that neither team calls home; end-of-season soccer standings decided by vote; college football games in the spring.

Over the past week, The Associated Press spoke to more than two dozen policymake­rs, coaches and players across the globe to get their candid assessment­s of plans to return from the stoppages caused by the new coronaviru­s. The conclusion: While it’s critical to put optimistic restart scenarios in place, there is no certainty any of them will work without buy-in from politician­s and an OK from players and medical experts. Underpinni­ng it all would have to be a drastic ramp-up in testing, a vaccine or treatment breakthrou­gh, or some other solution.

In short, the return of any sports will be risky and uncertain for the rest of this year and into 2021.

“It’s not about 22 players walking onto a pitch and throwing a ball out,” said FIFA Vice President Victor Montaglian­i, whose concerns about restarting soccer mirror those of all sports worldwide.

The organizers of the Olympics were among the last to postpone their event, then among the first to set a new date — exactly 52 weeks after the original July 24 cauldron lighting had been scheduled. The decision to reschedule for a date 15 months down the road came just before an unexpected spike in virus cases hit Japan. The worry that followed underscore­d the many open questions about the arc of the outbreak.

“I think everyone’s probably working on multiple options. It’s ‘If this, then what?’” said Tim Hinchey,

the CEO of USA Swimming, the sport’s governing body in the United States.

Virtually all the big-time team sports are coming up with scenarios to play with no fans in the stands.

The Washington Post reported that while the NFL is publicly committed to its usual kickoff date in September, it is looking into contingenc­ies that include shortening the season or playing in front of half-full or empty stadiums.

College athletic directors have come up with a halfdozen or more scenarios for football season, including, according to Oklahoma’s Joe Castiglion­e, a scenario in which part of the season would be played in the spring.

NASCAR has given teams a tentative schedule under which the season would resume May 24 without fans.

The NHL has drawn up plans that include resuming the season this summer, going directly to the playoffs and/or playing games in empty arenas in neutral-site cities.

The PGA Tour announced a mid-June restart and meshed its schedule with the already reworked majors calendar.

The NBA, the league that got in front of the coronaviru­s pandemic first, calling off games March 11, is in a holding pattern. Most of the league’s conversati­ons center on how to resume the season, not whether to cancel it.

English soccer’s Premier League wants to finish its season but would do so only “with the full support of the government” and when “medical guidance allows.” Meanwhile, in Scotland, a wild round of voting has already taken place to decide whether to lock in standings for leagues there and get ready for next season.

Major League Baseball in the U.S. is talking about bringing all 30 teams to Maricopa County, Arizona, for a regular season at spring training sites.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the infectious disease expert who has been calling for restraint in resuming any normal activities, offered a glimmer of hope when he suggested sports could return. He suggested no fans in arenas and constant testing for the players, who would likely need to be quarantine­d in hotels for weeks or months.

Not all the players are on board.

“I’m going to go four or five months without seeing my kid when it’s born? I can tell you right now that’s not going to happen,” Virginia Beach native Ryan Zimmerman of the Nationals wrote in a diary for AP. Zimmerman’s third child is due in June.

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