quote:Major League Baseball is seeing its first coronavirus cancellations since the restart of the 2020 season.
An outbreak of COVID-19 spread throughout the Miami Marlins clubhouse, bringing the total cases in recent days to at least 13, sources told ESPN's Jeff Passan and Jesse Rogers. As a result, the Marlins postponed their home opener, scheduled for Monday night; the game between the New York Yankees and the Phillies in Philadelphia -- where the Marlins played over the weekend -- also was postponed.
So what does this situation mean for the Marlins and MLB? We asked our experts to weigh in on some of the biggest questions.
quote:What does the Marlins' outbreak mean for the state of the MLB season as a whole?
We'll only be able to answer this accurately with hindsight -- though it looms as a possibility that Monday's news is an inflection point with ramifications not only across the rest of this season, but across all the major team sports endeavoring to attempt what MLB already is trying to pull off. For now, this is baseball's first big test of its ability to stage the 2020 season, and it is more than a little disheartening that it came with just 92 games in the books. Baseball couldn't get through its first weekend without a possible nightmare scenario emerging.
quote:Why were the Marlins allowed to play the Phillies on Sunday after multiple players tested positive?
There is no rule in place that players can't participate as they await test results. But playing could have been a mistake.
That Miami had multiple positives before Sunday's game and the contest went on as scheduled is concerning. Perhaps any time that happens, it should trigger an automatic postponement. Another red flag here is that even if you test every day, people do not necessarily exhibit symptoms or trigger positive tests right away. Inevitably, infected players will take the field without anyone, including themselves, knowing that they have contracted the virus.
To say that this lag is problematic would be massive understatement. But of course, that's where all of the other protocols -- masking, distancing, sanitizing -- take on added importance. The one step baseball hasn't taken is to make mask-wearing mandatory at all times, even on the field. And while that could be a next step, we don't actually yet know how the Marlins' outbreak began and if some kind of on-field mask mandate would have made a difference. Where did it happen? Airport? Airplane? Bus ride? Hotel lobby? Restroom?
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When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier
quote:Every sport has a coronavirus plan. MLB’s lasted four days.
Forget about the NFL season; it’s never going to happen.
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When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier
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Several people have eaten my cooking and survived.
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