Texarkana Gazette

So far in MLB, West is best at avoiding COVID-19 disruption

- By David Brandt

PHOENIX — It was a rarity at the time and provided a very 2020-style photo op: Oakland’s masked first baseman Matt Olson chatting with Los Angeles Angels star Mike Trout, who was also masked as he prepared to run the bases.

Less that two weeks later, it’s clear it was the start of the trend. When it comes to Major League Baseball’s ongoing fight to avoid COVID-19, it’s the West that’s had the most success.

Now it’s trying to keep it that way.

“I’m very excited about what’s happening here in the West,” Arizona manager Torey Lovullo said. “I don’t know if it’s dumb luck — I think all of these organizati­ons have sent really good messages.”

The shortened 60-game schedule for this season has basically turned baseball’s 30 teams into three separate 10-team leagues for two months. The NL and AL West will only play teams in their region until the playoffs begin. The same is true for the AL and NL Central, as well as the AL and NL East.

Two of those three 10-team groups have already seen major scheduling disruption­s because of COVID-19. The Miami Marlins had a huge outbreak that affected 21 members of the travelling party and it scrambled the schedule for multiple teams in the East. A smaller outbreak among the St. Louis Cardinals meant several teams in the Central had to adjust.

The West has avoided a similar situation despite multiple franchises being located in states that are current coronaviru­s hotspots. California, Texas and Arizona are all still fighting high caseloads.

It’s a big reason no one dares to get cocky. Vigilance is preached.

“This is a tough virus, man,” Colorado manager Bud Black said. “You don’t know how it’s going to play out. A lot of these positive cases could come from very innocent means. I don’t know. I just know that individual­ly and from a team component we have to do what we’re asked to do.”

Overall, baseball has had widespread success in holding off the virus. The league said Friday that it had conducted 13,043 tests over the past week with only 13 positives, which comes out to a positive rate of 0.1%. But it only takes a handful of positive tests to throw the sport into chaos.

The biggest motivation for taking precaution­s is obvious: keeping players and staff safe from a potentiall­y dangerous illness. While there haven’t been many serious cases in the big leagues, Atlanta’s Freddie Freeman fought off a very high fever and Boston’s Eduardo Rodriguez is out for the season because of heart inflammati­on related to his coronaviru­s case.

There are also competitiv­e reasons to stay safe. Missing a week of games and quarantini­ng in hotels is not a great way to maintain fitness. When one team gets the virus, several others are affected.

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