The Marlins' home opener against the Baltimore Orioles and the New York Yankees game at the Philadelphia Phillies, both scheduled for Monday night, have been postponed, MLB said.
Commissioner Rob Manfred didn't discuss canceling the season with the league's 30 team owners during a previously scheduled conference call, a source with knowledge of the call told CNN.
In an interview on MLB Network, Manfred said the Marlins will not play their game on Tuesday in Miami, either.
"We're doing some additional testing," Manfred said. "If the testing results are acceptable, the Marlins will resume play in Baltimore on Wednesday against the Orioles."
Eleven Marlins players and two coaches tested positive for the virus, ESPN reports. Marlins CEO Derek Jeter said the team is staying in Philadelphia, where it just played a three-game series, pending the results of a new round of testing.
"Postponing tonight's home opener was the correct decision to ensure we take a collective pause and try to properly grasp the totality of this situation," Jeter said in a statement.
The positive tests come just days after MLB began its abbreviated 60-game season -- which had been delayed from its usual April opening because of the pandemic -- and already threaten to upend the young season.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's leading infectious disease expert, told CNN he wants to remain optimistic about the season. Fauci said teams have put a lot of effort put into starting the season in a safe way, mainly by televising games without spectators.
"This is one of the things that could really put a halt in the progression of where you're going through the season," Fauci said. "Hopefully, they'll be able to continue and hopefully this is an outlier ... (and) a number of players and personnel are not infected ... So, we'll just have to see how this plays out."
The Marlins are not the first team to have players test positive and go on the injured list, but they are the first team to have an outbreak of this size.
To try to limit outbreaks, MLB is holding games without fans and has banned high-fives, fist bumps and spitting among players.
Still, the outbreak among players and staff underscores the difficulty -- if not impossibility -- of bringing large groups of people into close proximity for long periods of time when the coronavirus is so widespread in the American community.
Contact tracing of Miami's opponents shows how quickly the virus might spread through the league.
The Marlins played two exhibition games against the Atlanta Braves last week and played three games against the Philadelphia Phillies from Friday to Sunday.
The Phillies were set to host the New York Yankees on Monday. The Braves played three games against the New York Mets over the weekend in New York and are set to play the Tampa Bay Rays on Monday night. The Mets travel to Boston to play the Red Sox.
The Braves on Friday had to recall two catchers from their alternate training site after putting two players who had coronavirus-like symptoms on the injured list.
If the Marlins are to play any games soon, they might have to use some players from their alternate training site in Jupiter, Florida, where 30 other players have been practicing, or sign free agents.
With 102 fewer games, the shortened season makes each contest more important.
It is unclear whether the postponed games will be made up as part of a doubleheader, on an off day, or whether the season will be extended.
Another possibility MLB might have to consider is whether to go forward with 29 teams. Major League Soccer is holding a tournament as it resumes its season and two teams -- Dallas and Nashville -- did not play because of outbreaks on their teams.
Nationals manager worries for his heath
Washington Nationals manager Dave Martinez said Monday he is fearful of catching coronavirus.
Martinez, who underwent a heart procedure in 2019, told reporters: "I'm going to be honest with you, I'm scared. I really am."
He said he only has been at home or the Nationals' stadium. He said he washes his hands obsessively and wears a mask everywhere.
"But there's always that concern. You don't know. Right now, you don't know, because of my heart condition, what happens to me, if I do get it."
Martinez added, "My level of concern went from about an 8 to a 12."
The Nationals are scheduled to play three games against the Marlins in Miami, starting Friday.
Difficult in reopening amid a pandemic
In recent weeks, Miami has been one of the epicenters of the coronavirus, pushing hospitals to capacity. Miami-Dade County recently surpassed 100,000 confirmed coronavirus cases.
Sports have resumed in other parts of the world where coronavirus has been more successfully contained, including Europe and Asia. But the United States is by far the world leader in coronavirus cases and has not yet restarted any team sports without seeing new cases.
Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher David Price said on Twitter that he decided not to play this season partly because players' health wasn't being prioritized.
"Now we REALLY get to see if MLB is going to put players health first. Remember when Manfred said players health was PARAMOUNT?! Part of the reason I'm at home right now is because players health wasn't being put first. I can see that hasn't changed."
The outbreak, just three days into the season, stands as a clear warning for other sports leagues as well.
Like baseball, the NFL plans to begin its season in September at teams' regular home stadiums. Commissioner Roger Goodell on Monday formally announced the cancellation of preseason games.
But other sports leagues are reopening with their teams in so-called "bubbles" to try to limit interactions with the outside world.
The WNBA tipped off its season on Saturday at IMG Academy in Florida, the NBA is set to restart its season later this week in a bubble at ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex in Orlando and the NHL is planning to restart with dual bubbles in Toronto and Edmonton.
https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/27/us/miami-marlins-coronavirus/index.html
2020-07-28 01:01:00Z
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