USA TODAY International Edition

MLB schedule ( hopefully) is ambitious

- Bob Nightengal­e Columnist USA TODAY

It will be a Major League Baseball season like no other.

Then again, with the pandemic showing no signs of easing up and early glitches in the COVID- 19 testing process, there might be a better chance of someone pitching a no- hitter on opening day than actually having one.

The Washington Nationals and Houston Astros canceled their workouts Monday when their test results from Friday never arrived. The Toronto Blue Jays took a chartered flight Sunday night to Toronto but had to leave 12 players behind at their spring training complex in Dunedin, Florida, when one of their players tested positive and the others were in direct contact with him. And the Oakland Athletics had still not had their first full- squad workout by Monday afternoon.

Also on Monday, veteran outfielder Nick Markakis of the Atlanta Braves was the latest player to opt out, slugger Joey Gallo of the Texas Rangers was the latest star to test positive and Nationals GM Mike Rizzo was the latest executive to express his frustratio­n with the testing process.

Yet with MLB acknowledg­ing there

have been “unforeseen difficulties,” with players such as Kris Bryant of the Chicago Cubs openly wondering if it’s actually possible to keep everyone safe, a season still awaits.

So, ready or not, here we come. The updated 2020 MLB schedule was released Monday night, and the season will begin Thursday, July 23, with the defending World Series champion Washington Nationals playing host to the New York Yankees at 7: 08 p. m. ET in a nationally televised game on ESPN.

It will be the first time the Nats can hoist the World Series flag at Nationals Park, albeit with their fans having to resort to cheering in front of their TV sets with no fans being permitted inside the stadium.

The storied rivalry between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the San Francisco Giants wastes no time with the first meeting at 10: 08 p. m. ET as the second game of the nationally televised doublehead­er.

The most unique game of the season will be Aug. 8 between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Chicago White Sox, who will play in Dyersville, Iowa, where “Field of Dreams” was filmed. The 8,000- seat stadium is finished, but it’s unknown whether tickets will be sold.

The Yankees originally were supposed to play against the White Sox, but the 60- game schedule has teams playing 40 games in their own division and 20 interleagu­e games against teams in their geographic­al division. The schedule is designed to greatly reduce travel, but the consequenc­e is that it creates disparity.

Teams will play 10 games against each division opponent, but with only three series, the home- road split will not be equal. Some teams will play three home games against an opponent and seven on the road. The Giants will play seven games against the Dodgers at Dodger Stadium and only three games against them in San Francisco. The Cubs, who had the third- worst road record a year ago, 33- 48, play seven times against the Reds in Cincinnati but only three times at Wrigley Field. Gentlemen, start your complaints. The interleagu­e games will create more fairness. Teams will play 10 games at home and 10 on the road in interleagu­e play. Each team plays six games against their natural interleagu­e rival and four apiece against the other teams in the opposite league.

The revised schedule provides six off days for all but the four teams that play July 23; they’ll have seven. On the final day of the regular season, Sept. 27, all 30 teams will start their games at the same time, 3 ET.

Jackie Robinson Day, which traditiona­lly has been held on April 15, will be Aug. 28, the anniversar­y of the March on Washington along with the date Robinson first met with Brooklyn Dodgers executive Branch Rickey to discuss playing in the big leagues.

MLB will also celebrate the 100th anniversar­y of the Negro Leagues on Aug. 16, while Roberto Clemente Day will be Sept. 9.

The first nationally televised games on Fox will be July 25 with the Milwaukee Brewers and Cubs, Giants and Dodgers, and Yankees and Nationals. The first ESPN Sunday Night Game will be a doublehead­er July 26 with the Braves and Yankees at 7: 08 p. m. ET and the Giants and Dodgers at 10: 08 p. m. ET.

That is the plan, anyway, with the wild- card games starting Sept. 29 and the World Series beginning Oct. 20.

We’ll see if a season is even possible, in a year when all 30 teams, no matter what division or league, will all play one common opponent every single day on the schedule: COVID- 19.

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 ?? GEOFF BURKE/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Nationals are scheduled to get the season off and running by hosting the Yankees on July 23.
GEOFF BURKE/ USA TODAY SPORTS The Nationals are scheduled to get the season off and running by hosting the Yankees on July 23.

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