San Francisco Chronicle

Nationals, Yankees to kick off 2020 season — finally

- By Ben Walker Ben Walker is an Associated Press writer.

Opening Day, at last. A baseball season that was on the brink before it ever began because of the coronaviru­s outbreak is set to start Thursday when Max Scherzer and the World Series champion Washington Nationals host $324 million ace Gerrit Cole and the New York Yankees.

When it does get under way — the D.C. forecast calls for thundersto­rms, the latest rocky inning in this whatcangow­rong game — it’ll mark the start of the most bizarre season in the history of Major League Baseball.

A 60game campaign, stars opting out. Ballparks without fans, players wearing masks. Pipedin sound effects, cardboard cutouts for spectators. Spraypaint­ed ads on the mound, pitchers with personal rosin bags.

And a rack of strange rules. DHs in the National League, well, OK. A runner on second to start the 10th inning? C’mon, now.

“Gosh, it’s going to be fun,” Cole said. “It’s going to have fake crowd noise, and going to be 2020 coronaviru­s baseball.”

Plus a team that still doesn’t know where it’s going to play — barred from Toronto because of health concerns, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and the Blue Jays were hoping to roost in Pittsburgh or Baltimore or Buffalo, N.Y., or somewhere else.

“You just have to accept it. Seems like every day there’s a challenge and you just have to overcome it. If this is what it’s going to be, this is what’s going to be,” Scherzer said. “This is 2020 baseball.”

To many fans, that will do. No other choice, really. Four months after the games were supposed to start, strange ball is better than no ball, right?

We’ll see. Opening Day brings a tasty doublehead­er: a marquee pitching matchup in Washington, followed by the nightcap at Dodger Stadium when Clayton Kershaw takes on the Giants.

One player Kershaw won’t face: sixtime AllStar, threetime champion and former MVP Buster Posey. The Giants catcher and his wife have adopted twin identical girls who were prematurel­y born, and he’s among about a dozen players who have chosen to sit out this year.

Dodgers pitcher David Price, Washington infielder Ryan Zimmerman and Atlanta outfielder Nick Markakis also opted out.

Other players won’t be ready by the weekend — on Wednesday, the Royals announced Hunter Dozier (26 home runs, 10 triples) had tested positive for the virus and was being put on the injured list.

For those are who healthy, it’s time to play. For how long, with the virus looming, we’ll find out.

And remember, this is a sprint. Earlier suggestion­s for an expanded playoff field were ignored, creating a scramble for the 10 coveted spots headed toward October.

Tossing out the first ball at Nationals Park to begin a schedule clobbered by COVID19 will be Dr. Anthony Fauci, the country’s top infectious disease expert.

“I used to play baseball as a young boy,” Fauci, 79, told CNN. “I hope I don’t bounce it too much.”

Don’t worry, Doc. Even before the first pitch, this season already has handled plenty of bad hops.

 ?? David J. Phillip / Associated Press 2019 ?? Max Scherzer hoisted the World Series trophy in 2019; on Thursday, he’ll start against the Yankees.
David J. Phillip / Associated Press 2019 Max Scherzer hoisted the World Series trophy in 2019; on Thursday, he’ll start against the Yankees.

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