Los Angeles Times

Virus causes more sports to take action

MLB, MLS and NFL follow NBA lead in suspending operations indefinite­ly.

- By David Wharton Staff writers Kevin Baxter, Jorge Castillo, Helene Elliott and Bill Shaikin contribute­d to this story.

For basketball, the tipping point felt sudden and shocking, a player testing positive for the coronaviru­s, an NBA game halted before tipoff and fans asked to leave the arena in an orderly manner.

For the rest of profession­al sports in the U.S., the ensuing reaction was utterly predictabl­e.

The NHL and Major League Soccer called for an immediate suspension of regular-season play on Thursday and Major League Baseball put a stop to spring training, delaying the start of the regular season by at least two weeks.

“MLB will announce the effects on the schedule at an appropriat­e time,” the league said in a statement, adding that it will “remain flexible as events warrant, with the hope of resuming operations as soon as possible.”

The various league headquarte­rs had been grappling with the issue for days, wondering what sort of action they should take, hoping to buy time.

It seems their hands were ultimately forced not only by a steady growth in reported COVID-19 cases nationwide but also by government­s in states such as California, New York, Ohio and Washington, which placed significan­t restrictio­ns on large public gatherings.

“The NHL has been attempting to follow the mandates of health experts and local authoritie­s, while preparing for any possible developmen­ts without taking premature or unnecessar­y measures,” NHL Commission­er Gary Bettman said in a statement.

“However, following last night’s news that an NBA player has tested positive for coronaviru­s … it is no longer appropriat­e to try to continue to play games at this time.”

There were 1,323 reported cases and 38 deaths nationwide as of late Thursday. In calling for no gatherings that exceed 250 people in California, Gov. Gavin Newsom spoke about “all of us making the right choice.”

Still, the decision to suspend play was difficult for hockey.

Teams had just entered the stretch run of the regular season, jockeying for position with the playoffs scheduled to begin in mid-April. League executives did not specify if postseason berths might have to be based on standings after Wednesday’s games or through some kind of play-in tournament.

It’s also unclear whether players will be permitted to practice in their respective teams’ facilities, a question Kings President Luc Robitaille said he expects to be resolved by the league within 24 hours.

Bettman noted that many of his franchises share arenas with NBA teams.

“It now seems likely that some member of the NHL community would test positive at some point,” he stated.

From an economic perspectiv­e, the NHL has lesslucrat­ive television and sponsorshi­p deals than some other leagues, making it more reliant on gate receipts.

That impact would undoubtedl­y be felt by ushers, vendors, ticket-takers and other arena employees, as well as employees in restaurant­s and bars near arenas and stadiums.

AEG — the parent company of the Kings — is poised to make some kind of accommodat­ion for arena employees, Chief Operating Officer Kelly Cheeseman said, adding: “I can tell you that conversati­on is happening not only locally but I think across the nation at this point.”

Ducks owners Henry and Susan Samueli have told staff members who were scheduled to work March events at Honda Center that they will be paid even though events there have been postponed through March 31.

The Kings and the Ducks supported the league’s decision. “These unpreceden­ted steps are being taken for the betterment and well-being of a community we are proud to be part of,” the Ducks said in a statement.

Baseball faced a different scenario with opening day scheduled for March 26. The league had considered shifting games away from hardhit states or regions as an alternativ­e to postponeme­nt but had met with push-back.

Public health experts told The Times that, with the limited availabili­ty of coronaviru­s tests, it would be folly to assume the virus had not spread to any given area of the country, even ones with few reported cases.

On Thursday morning, before MLB issued its decision, the wife of Washington Nationals pitcher Sean Doolittle pleaded with fans to stay away from spring training.

“I’m probably not supposed to say this, but people I beg of you, please do not come to games right now,” Eireann Dolan wrote on Twitter. “I know they’re still inexplicab­ly playing them right now, but that doesn’t mean it’s safe to attend. You’re putting yourselves, the staffs, and teams at risk. Please don’t go.”

“It’s not just athletes,” Dodgers infielder Gavin Lux said before the MLB announceme­nt. “It’s everybody in the whole world.”

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said “a best-case scenario” would be to play all 162 games, with postponed games from the first weeks of the season tacked onto the end.

A shortened baseball season would not be without precedent. In 1995, when players struck, owners agreed to an abbreviate­d spring training and reduced the regular season from 162 games to 144.

The hiatus might not be as significan­t for pro soccer, which began its season a couple of weeks ago. Though MLS executives will suspend play for at least 30 days, they remained confident that rescheduli­ng would allow for a full 34 games.

“Our clubs are united in the decision to temporaril­y suspend our season,” MLS Commission­er Don Garber said in a statement. The league, he added, was acting on guidance from the Centers

for Disease Control and Prevention, the Public Health Agency of Canada and other public health authoritie­s.

Like his counterpar­ts in other leagues, Garber had been struggling with how to proceed earlier in the week, especially after local government­s banned large gatherings in cities where the San Jose Earthquake­s and Seattle Sounders play their home games.

The second-tier USL Championsh­ip league, which has four teams in California, also suspended play and the U.S. Soccer Federation canceled friendly matches the men’s and women’s teams had scheduled in the coming weeks.

CONCACAF, the regional governing body for soccer, suspended the Champions League tournament that was to have featured LAFC playing Mexico’s Cruz Azul in the quarterfin­als Thursday at Banc of California Stadium.

That game was called off early Thursday and it is uncertain when the tournament will resume.

No decision was announced regarding the CONCACAF Olympic qualifying men’s soccer tournament in Guadalajar­a, Mexico, scheduled to begin March 20.

In other sports, the PGA Tour canceled a string of tournament­s, including the rest of the Players Championsh­ip, and the LPGA Tour postponed three events, two of them in California. The NFL, still months from training camp, called off its annual meetings in Florida but plans to proceed with the draft in late April. The Long Beach Grand Prix, set for April 16-18, has been postponed.

Talking about the significan­t changes that have swept across the rest of the sports landscape, Ducks coach Dallas Eakins attempted to put things into perspectiv­e.

“Obviously there’s a breakout of the virus and I think we need a massive breakout of kindness,” he said. “I think we need a massive breakout of alertness.”

 ?? Elise Amendola Associated Press ?? MINNESOTA TWINS catcher Mitch Garver is alone in an empty Hammond Stadium dugout in Fort Myers, Fla. Major League Baseball has suspended the rest of its spring training schedule.
Elise Amendola Associated Press MINNESOTA TWINS catcher Mitch Garver is alone in an empty Hammond Stadium dugout in Fort Myers, Fla. Major League Baseball has suspended the rest of its spring training schedule.

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