MLB success will count on players being smart when it comes to health matters

AP photo / Atlanta Braves outfielder Ronald Acuna Jr., an All-Star last season, and his teammates will soon be back together and preparing for a short 60-game season in which avoiding injuries and illness — including COVID-19 — is imperative.
AP photo / Atlanta Braves outfielder Ronald Acuna Jr., an All-Star last season, and his teammates will soon be back together and preparing for a short 60-game season in which avoiding injuries and illness — including COVID-19 — is imperative.

PHOENIX - Major League Baseball's bubble-free environment is an anomaly as the sports world tries to come back amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Instead of taking a group of teams to Disney World (like the NBA and MLS) or concentrating on a few hub cities (like the current NHL plan), Major League Baseball has 30 teams spread all over the United States - and potentially Canada, depending on what the Toronto Blue Jays decide to do - with players, coaches and team personnel trying to stay healthy while the virus is still spreading.

Needless to say, it won't be easy.

Arizona Diamondbacks general manager Mike Hazen said he'll be constantly reminding everyone in his organization about the delicacy of the current situation. It's especially important in Phoenix, where COVID-19 cases have increased substantially over the past few weeks.

"High-risk behavior is going to impact you and the person standing next to you and the person standing next to them," Hazen said. "We're going to be extremely mindful of it. The protocols are going to answer some of those things for us, but away from the field, I believe we are going to have to make sure everyone understands exactly what we mean by high-risk behavior.

"Things are going to have to change temporarily in our lives to be able to do this."

That means altering the way baseball players behave on and off the field.

The on-field portion is largely addressed in a hefty manual that covers everything from hotels to showers to spitting. It will be awkward and sometimes not particularly practical, but teams are vowing to do their best.

"You're putting a lot of people in a small, confined space, which is the one thing the medical experts are telling us not to do," Oakland Athletics GM David Forst said. "So we'll have to limit clubhouse time as much as possible, guys will have to wear masks as much as possible."

Then there's the considerable amount of time players will spend away from the field.

Texas Rangers manager Chris Woodward said health matters will be critical throughout the season, and the usual carefree life of a ballplayer will be a bit more tame. While health is obviously most important because it affects life beyond baseball, there's also the on-field realization that losing players for several days to COVID-19 might also be the difference between wins and losses.

"The younger guys that are single that, you know, tend to be a little bit more social," Woodward said, "those are going to be the challenging ones because they're not going to want to sit in your hotel room on road trips. But I think it's their responsibility that they have to the ballclub and the organization and their teammates, honestly."

Added Minnesota Twins closer Taylor Rogers: "A lot of it's going to be on you, on the honor system. Don't be the one person that's going to mess it up for everybody else. When you want to go do something, or something like that, you need to remember it's about your team, not just yourself."

The first step toward a successful season is getting all of the players to their home cities. Most shouldn't have much of a problem, but there are plenty of logistics involved with domestic and international travel. Some players might face significant hurdles: For instance, Arizona pitcher Bo Takahashi is coming back to the United States from Brazil, which is another coronavirus hotspot.

Chicago White Sox GM Rick Hahn said his team's travel department has a busy week ahead, but that they've been planning this scenario for quite a while.

The challenges are real, but so is the payoff. For MLB, a strange 60-game season is a better alternative than no season at all.

"It's a little bit of a challenge," Hahn said. "It's not impossible."

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