New York Post

HOME SWEET HOME GAMES

CUOMO URGES N.Y. PRO TEAMS TO PLAY IN STATE, WITHOUT FANS

- By KEN DAVIDOFF kdavidoff@nypost.com

Summer in the city suddenly sounds a lot more appealing.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Monday that the state would support profession­al teams’ efforts to reopen their facilities and hold games without fans for now — an especially good sign for the Yankees and Mets, who aspire to start their 2020 regular seasons at Yankee Stadium and Citi Field in July.

“I ... have been encouragin­g major sports teams to plan reopenings without fans. But the games could be televised,” Cuomo announced at his daily news conference.

“New York

State will helpthose major sports franchises to do just that.

Hockey, basketball, baseball, football, whoever can reopen. We’re a ready, willing and able partner.” Cuomo’s reopening committee, introduced in late April, includes a healthy sports representa­tion, with Madison Square Garden CEO James Dolan (who owns the Knicks and Rangers) joining Yankees president Randy Levine and Mets COO Jeff Wilpon as well as Kim Pegula, the coowner of Buffalo’s Bills and Sabres. Hence the governor and his office have been in regular contact with myriad powerful figures from the New York profession­al sports world.

While the NBA and NHL haven’t decided on firm plans to restart their seasons, which were postponed in March — and the NFL isn’t scheduled to start until September — Major League Baseball and the Players Associatio­n recently opened negotiatio­ns in the hopes of convening for spring training next month and then playing a schedule about half of the standard length, ideally at the 30 teams’ home ballparks. MLB initiated those talks by focusing on safety and health issues, a nod to the concerns of public health officials as well as of the players themselves. The players and owners must collective­ly sign off on both safety/health and financial terms, the latter of which figures to produce a particular­ly tense debate, before anyone takes the field.

Those fields, however, now seem more likely to welcome the New York clubs with open arms. On Saturday, Cuomo announced that horse racing tracks and the car racing at Watkins Glen upstate can open without fans on June 1. Monday’s announceme­nt marked a logical progressio­n from that.

New York City, which houses the Yankees in The Bronx and the Mets in Queens, has not yet reached all seven of Cuomo’s thresholds to reopen the area to nonessenti­al businesses as well as more extensive activities; as of Monday, the city stood at three down, four to go, the areas of need covering hospitaliz­ations, total beds and intensive care unit beds available and the number of contact tracers in the region. Mayor Bill de Blasio said Monday in a news briefing that he aimed to hit all seven by the first half of June, which would afford the Yankees and Mets sufficient time to bring baseball back to the Big Apple.

The governors of Texas and California announced on Monday that pro sports could resume without fans on May 31 and June 1, respective­ly, making it all in all a very encouragin­g day for sports fans.

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