Orlando Sentinel

Plans for starting play come into focus

- By Marc Topkin

No one can say yet what the 2020 Major League Baseball season will look like.

There is too much that even top officials don’t know and, more importantl­y, don’t control regarding public health and safety aspects of the coronaviru­s spread as well as government­al decisions on reopening states and cities.

They do know enough to be cautiously optimistic that there will be a season.

And — besides the absence of fans, at least at the start — it might not look as radically different as previously thought.

“I’m more optimistic today than I was 10 days ago,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said Friday. “It sounds like there’s enough thought from so many different corners — players, owners, league officials — that the industry as a whole is really trying to put their heads together to make something come together for some sort of a season.”

The next few weeks are considered critical as the medical and societal impact of reopening parts of the country will dictate the league’s timetable.

The preferred plan would be to start play in late June or early July with as many teams as possible playing in home parks, such as the Rays at Tropicana Field, while competing in their regular divisions with an abbreviate­d schedule of at least 80 games.

The Arizona scenario, in which all players and staff would essentiall­y live and play in a colonized bubble, is much less likely. So, too, is having all teams play at spring sites and compete in Cactus and Grapefruit leagues. Other reports about having teams assigned to “hub” sites in Arizona, Texas and Florida, or realigned into three geographic­al divisions, are being downplayed or dismissed. Here are some of the issues that do need to be settled:

Schedule. The basic premise is to play as many games as possible no matter when they start, which could include scheduled doublehead­ers, perhaps seven innings. There also is some desire to expand the postseason field, which would generate more national TV money. That has to be balanced with weather concerns of playing into November (unless the league opts for a neutral-site World Series) and into flu season as the potential of not finishing the playoffs is a concern. Are 80 games enough for the regular season? 100? Are the playoffs expanded from 10 teams to 14? Or 16? Would MLB dare try an NCAAstyle tournament?

Logistics. With teams competing in their regular-season stadiums, players would live at home with their families. Visiting teams could travel as usual on chartered planes and buses, and stay in hotels, asked to follow the local social-distancing protocols but not quarantine­d. Travel could be reduced, such as by limiting teams to playing in their own divisions and the correspond­ing geographic­al divisions, with the Rays mostly playing American League East opponents plus the National League East teams.

Testing. MLB officials know for any plan to work they have to be able to regularly test players, staff, umpires and others allowed into stadiums. They also know they can’t appear to be cutting in line to get the tests ahead of hospitals or government agencies. Testing could be mandatory initially, then for cause, using more basic daily protocols, such as in Korea where players have their temperatur­es recorded multiple times, including on their way into the stadium.

Rosters. The general consensus is that players want to get going and could be ready after two to three weeks of a “spring” training, which would also be held in home cities for most teams. So maybe a mid-May announceme­nt for players to start getting ready and an early June opening of camps? Rosters are certain to be expanded beyond the planned 26. Teams will need extra bodies, especially pitchers, given the abbreviate­d build-up period and condensed schedule. It is unlikely there will be a traditiona­l minor-league season, so teams will want extra players available in case of injury or illness. There could be a taxi squad or a developmen­t program at spring sites. If so, does top prospect Wander Franco make the cut if the Rays carry 30 active players? 33? Or could he be among 10-20 players in a training program?

Finances. Players agreed in March to get paid their set salaries on a prorated basis based on games played. Owners say that deal was struck assuming fans would be in the stands — fans being in stands accounts for roughly 40% of local revenues — and now want players to take a further cut. The simplest solution may be a revenue-sharing plan, first between the teams, then at a set percentage with the players.

 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE/AP ?? Tampa Bay Rays starting pitcher Charlie Morton (50) warms up between innings during a spring training game against the Baltimore Orioles on March 2 in Sarasota. The Rays and MLB are figuring out how to resume play.
JOHN BAZEMORE/AP Tampa Bay Rays starting pitcher Charlie Morton (50) warms up between innings during a spring training game against the Baltimore Orioles on March 2 in Sarasota. The Rays and MLB are figuring out how to resume play.

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