USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Lockout could cost fans yet another spring training

- Bob Nightengal­e Columnist USA TODAY

PHOENIX – We’re not supposed to care about spring training, right?

If the lockout drags on, and spring training starts late, it’s no big deal as long as the regular season starts on time, we’re told.

Besides, spring training games are completely meaningles­s, we’re reminded. It’s impossible to judge a team by its spring training performanc­e, or else the San Francisco Giants’ 107-victory season wouldn’t have been such a shock.

Teams already know who they plan to keep, send to the minors or try to trade before they even arrive at camp.

But if spring training is so irrelevant, why does it mean so much to the fans and all of the spring training cities in Arizona and Florida?

The players will tell you they’re in the best shape of their lives and are anticipati­ng the best season of their career, and we believe them.

Every single team feels they’ll be in the postseason if things break just right, and we agree.

Fans love spring training, flocking to Arizona and Florida to escape the cold and snow, getting a close and personal look at their heroes, working on their tans, mixing in some golf and nightlife, and vowing one day to retire in the land of sunshine.

There’s a reason why one of every 10 Phoenix area residents is from Chicago where the Cubs and White Sox have their spring training camps.

The price of spring training tickets is outrageous and you can go to regularsea­son games cheaper at home. But the opportunit­y to be out in the sun, drink cold beer and stuff your face with nachos, it’s priceless.

Spring training, which once featured 60-cent tickets where you could sit in sections by yourself, has become big business. Spring training used to be a financial drain on clubs. Now, it’s a valuable revenue stream with free marketing.

The Cactus League schedule, which features about 240 games in the 10 different ballparks, brings in $644 million in revenue, according to an Arizona economic study. Restaurant­s and bars owners say that spring training accounts for nearly 60% of their annual business.

But here we are a few weeks from when pitchers and catchers traditiona­lly report, and no one knows when spring training will start, how many games can be played, or whether we will have another truncated schedule.

COVID-19 screwed up the past two years of spring training.

The labor war between the owners and players, with only their second meeting in 54 days occurring this week, may be responsibl­e for the three-peat.

The drop-dead deadline for a new collective bargaining agreement to ensure a 162-game season is about March 1.

The deadline for the start of spring training on time, with players needing at least a week to 10 days to arrive with visas and COVID-19 protocols, is about Feb. 6.

An abbreviate­d Cactus League and Grapefruit League schedule would be brutal to the local economies.

“It would be devastatin­g,” says Don Carson, former owner of Don & Charlie’s in Scottsdale. “We’ve had interrupti­ons before, and it is devastatin­g for anybody that lives in the state of Arizona. Everybody looks forward to seeing baseball, but more importantl­y, it’s for the economic survival of many businesses.

“It would be like taking away Christmas and Thanksgivi­ng from the retail business.”

Carson, 77, has long been everyone’s favorite Cactus League luminary where his restaurant was the mecca for spring training. His restaurant was responsibl­e for the press room dining at every San Francisco Giants home game. If someone had a press conference and wanted a buffet, they’d call Carson.

You wanted to see Willie Mays, Ernie Banks, George Brett, Robin Yount, Mark Grace, Will Clark, Rick Sutcliffe or any of your other favorite players, you had dinner and drinks at Don and Charlie’s.

You wanted to give Bud Selig advice when he was commission­er, you stopped in the corner booth at Don and Charlie’s.

You wanted to laugh and hear stories from Milwaukee Brewers iconic broadcaste­r Bob Uecker, you stopped by just to say hello.

Places like Don and Charlie’s, which opened in 1981 in the heart of Old Town Scottsdale and closed on April 10, 2019, represente­d everything wonderful about spring training.

You walked in, and you’d see old friends and meet new ones. You’d see the 4,000 pieces of sports memorabili­a lining the walls and ceilings. Visitors might have come in for the food, but they left with lifelong memories.

There’s nothing like the six weeks of spring training, particular­ly in Phoenix, where 15 teams are located in the Valley.

If it weren’t for the Cactus League, which nearly became extinct in the 1980s, Don and Charlie’s never opens, Carson says.

“The first year was miserable, I was striking out a lot,” Carson says. “Then, Frank Robinson started coming. So did

Harry (Caray) and Uecker. Then, one day, we had baseball royalty, Roger Angell, Chub Feeney and Bill Rigney came in together, and I told my wife, ‘We’re on our way.’ ”

The rest is history, and Carson’s restaurant was an integral part of what made spring training so wonderful, a baseball reality version of “Cheers.”

Those days are gone, and considerin­g what has happened with spring training the last couple of years, who knows what will be the new norm?

We were supposed to find out in February, but at this negotiatin­g pace, the charm of spring training may have to wait another year.

“It was just an enjoyable, relaxing time that went on for almost 40 years,” Carson said. “It was just fun. It was a time for old friends to get together and make new friends. That’s what I miss the most, the people.

“I’d sure love to see it happen again.” Oh, man, wouldn’t we all?

Rays’ dual-nationalit­y dream is dead

It was a crazy idea to start with, and it was even crazier that it dragged on for 21⁄2 years until MLB mercifully put a stop to it.

The Tampa Bay Rays were never going to be permitted to split their season between St. Petersburg, Florida, and Montreal, and now the zany concept is kaput.

If the two cities could get the funding for two brand-new ballparks, why in the world would they share an 81-game home schedule?

And does anyone actually think the Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n would approve the idea of having their players and their families spending the first half of the season in Florida, get completely uprooted into another country, and be OK with it?

You’d spend the year living out of boxes and suitcases.

Oh, and how about the fans? “The split-city concept was always a terrible plan, akin to your spouse telling you they wanted to be married to someone else on weekends,” Rays fan Michael Stein, 46, told the Tampa Bay Times, “while expecting you to be happy to be a second spouse on Monday-Friday. Who would stay in that relationsh­ip? A divorce would be preferable, so even the team leaving, which I definitely don’t want, was better than a split-city plan.”

Rays principal owner Stu Sternberg is convinced it will work and one day will be part of the sports landscape. Sure, maybe if you’re the Minnesota Twins and spend half of the year in Minneapoli­s and the other in St. Paul, or the Rays

dividing time between Tampa and Orlando.

But for two cities located 1,516 miles away to split their major league season is ludicrous.

“I have no doubt that what we try to accomplish with our sister-city plan will become accepted in all major leagues and profession­al sports,” Sternberg said. “Major League Baseball simply isn’t prepared to cross that threshold right now.” Hopefully, not ever.

If the Rays can’t find a new home in the Tampa Bay area after years of trying, with an average attendance of just 9,500 last season, it’s time to move.

MLB still is holding out hope the Rays can find a resolution in the Tampa Bay area before their lease expires after the 2027 season, just like the Oakland Athletics in the East Bay.

Once those situations are resolved, it’s expansion time.

The expansion franchises would bring in about $3 billion to the owners, introduce massive realignmen­t and ease the

scheduling nightmare with 32 teams.

MLB’s preferred sites are Nashville, Tennessee, and Montreal.

It’s inevitable those cities will have franchises providing they will have new ballparks.

The sooner the better for everyone.

Fighting the virus

Who knows exactly when spring training will start, or what the collective bargaining agreement will exactly look like, but rest assured, there will be extensive health and safety protocols again when players report with COVID-19 and the omicron variant continuing to wreak havoc.

“The virus,” said renowned chemist Dr. Lawrence Rocks, “is here to stay. It’s been almost two years now. The virus isn’t going away. We all face a health issue. As this virus continues to mutate, we need a new vaccine. We’re chasing a moving target.”

Fewer than 70% of MLB players are

vaccinated, causing consternat­ion and trepidatio­n.

There are at least two veteran major league coaches who were unable to find big-league jobs this winter because of their refusal to become vaccinated.

There are free agents who are not vaccinated with several privately worried that being unvaccinat­ed will hurt them in the market.

MLB and the players associatio­n won’t require players to receive the vaccine, but if they aren’t, the protocols can be restrictiv­e, particular­ly while traveling.

Meanwhile, spring training is scheduled to start within a month, and if omicron has its way, it could create a nightmare, sidelining not only players who test positive but also those in close contact.

“Baseball did all they could with social distancing and encouragin­g vaccinatio­n,” Rocks said, “but what’s bad is the virus keeps mutating and science can’t keep up with it.”

 ?? KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? A general view of Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida, prior to opening day in 2019.
KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS A general view of Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida, prior to opening day in 2019.
 ?? ??
 ?? JOE CAMPOREALE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? A fan takes a photo on their phone of a general view of game action between the Cincinnati Reds and the Los Angeles Angels during the second inning of a spring training game at Goodyear Ballpark.
JOE CAMPOREALE/USA TODAY SPORTS A fan takes a photo on their phone of a general view of game action between the Cincinnati Reds and the Los Angeles Angels during the second inning of a spring training game at Goodyear Ballpark.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States