New York Daily News

Rifts appear on start, length of 2021 season

- BY KRISTIE ACKERT

Despite reports that the season could be delayed because of the coronaviru­s continuing to rage across the country, Aaron Boone is optimistic­ally expecting to start spring training on time in February.

“We have the reporting dates and that’s what we’re told ... to get ready for,” the Yankees manager said Tuesday on a conference call with reporters. “I think we’re all sitting here with the experience of 2020, and where we’re still at in our world, and you can draw our own conclusion­s. … I’m hopeful that [spring training] is on time and as we see these vaccines start to roll out that that’s a game changer in all this.”

“So, I’m preparing in my mind and approachin­g my conversati­ons with staff and players that we are on time,” Boone added. “If we need to adjust that along the way we will.”

According to a report in USA Today, the owners and league want to push back the start of the 2021 baseball year, starting the regular season in May and potentiall­y abbreviati­ng it again. The report has owners claiming the reason is so that players can get the coronaviru­s vaccine, which was just rolled out this week, before spring training.

The union and players, who took significan­t salary cuts in the 2020 pandemic-shortened season, would like the regular-season to start on time and hope to report as scheduled in February and play a full season.

In a video call with reporters on Tuesday evening superagent Scott Boras said the questions about safety were answered in how the players got through 2020.

“That whole issue is about working conditions and, and that is something for the Players Associatio­n appropriat­ely to deal with, and also manage and see what direction players want to take with that, Boras said. “But the true truth is that in 2020 we had a lot of questions. I’m very disappoint­ed that we didn’t play 100 games, at minimum, 120, in 2020 because we have the means to do it. And taking advantage of October, starting earlier, all these things could have been done.

And, and I think it was a large mistake of the game because we had a season that is not a customary Major League season. And so the integrity of our game is, we now know we can do it. We now know that we can play this game. And we can do it safely. And with the vaccine coming even at a higher safety level. So the reality of it is it’s not a question of whether we can do it, because we’ve already done it, so that unknown is erased.. So I don’t know how you use anything other than we’re going to support in advance the integrity of the game and provide a full season, knowing what we’ve learned in 2020, because the questions have been answered, but we can do it effectivel­y.”

The length of the season was a contentiou­s point between the players and owners as they negotiated the protocols to carry out the 2020 season. Ultimately, Commission­er Rob Manfred dictated the 60-game season after the players had agreed to what ended up being about 33% of their salary in what became a very ugly and public negotiatio­n.

While the owners cite health and safety of the players as their reason for a potential late and abbreviate­d season, ultimately a delay would be beneficial for them financiall­y. This could be the first shots fired on yet another battle between players and owners.

The same day the first vaccine was administer­ed, the United States crossed the grim milestone of 300,000 deaths from COVID-19.

The delay would not only allow the players and personnel to get vaccinated, it would also allow fans to get the vaccine. It would also allow the owners, who claimed to have lost about $2 billion last season because of COVID-19, to help defer the cost of spring training if they are able to open the gates to fans for exhibition games and then open the regular season with fans in the ballparks, an industry source explained.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has said that most fans will not be vaccinated until the end of the summer and until then ballparks and stadiums will still be limited by public health officials.

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