Lodi News-Sentinel

MLB chief discusses possible playoff bubble

- By Bill Shaikin

LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers have the best record in the major leagues. In a normal year, that would have earned them home-field advantage throughout the playoffs. In this pandemic year, they might not play a single postseason home game.

In order to maximize the chances to complete four rounds of postseason play without a coronaviru­s outbreak or shutdown, the league office and the players’ union are discussing a playoff bubble.

With the warm October weather in Southern California, Dodger Stadium would be a natural part of a postseason bubble. However, even in a season without fans, the league is wary of a scenario where a team would play every game of a series in its home ballpark.

In the new first round — a best-of-three — the games were scheduled to be played at the home field of the higher seed. But that plan might now be secondary to the priority for players to be isolated in one or more locations during postseason play.

“Safety is the paramount issue,” Commission­er Rob Manfred said in an exclusive interview with The Los Angeles Times. “We are very cognizant of the homefield advantage issue. We’re cognizant of it with respect to the new round of playoffs. And we’re cognizant of the need to avoid a league championsh­ip series site or a World Series site where one of the participat­ing team gets to play all the games at home. We will avoid that problem if at all humanly possible.”

Manfred said the league had not settled on whether the bubble would be used for the entirety of the postseason. He acknowledg­ed that the league and union have discussed one bubble in Southern California and another in Texas, but he said no decisions on location have been finalized.

“It may turn out to be those two,” he said. “We haven’t decided yet. We’ve had government officials from other jurisdicti­ons call and say, hey, we can do X, Y and Z for you if you do it here.”

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