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Coronavirus outbreak among Marlins players calls MLB season into question just days into start

Coronavirus outbreak among Marlins players calls MLB season
into question just days into start 1

A coronavirus outbreak among players on the Miami Marlins forced postponement of two baseball games Monday, calling into question the viability of Major League Baseball’s season just one weekend into its long-delayed start.

The Marlins’ home opener against the Baltimore Orioles and the New York Yankees’ game against the Philadelphia Phillies in Philadelphia had both been to scheduled a start a little after 7 p.m. Monday. But by late Monday morning, both contests were listed as “postponed” by MLB.

“Tonight’s scheduled games between the Miami Marlins and the Baltimore Orioles at Marlins Park and the Philadelphia Phillies and the New York Yankees at Citizens Bank Park have been postponed while Major League Baseball conducts additional COVID-19 testing,” MLB said in a statement.

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Marlins CEO Derek Jeter said that his entire team underwent another round of testing Monday and that cancellation of the Orioles game was the only reasonable option.

“The health of our players and staff has been and will continue to be our primary focus,” Jeter said in a statement.

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Jeter’s statement did not disclose how many players or staffers had tested positive.

“The guys that tested positive are quarantined here in Philly,” Miami manager Don Mattingly told reporters after the Marlins finished their three-game series in Philadelphia on Sunday.

MLB teams generally fly on chartered planes immediately after finishing series, but the Marlins chose to stay in Philadelphia.

“We were more comfortable flying as a group later,” Mattingly said. “We’re talking about these guys traveling back home to their families and their kids, and it’s the reason we want to be safe.”

The MLB season had been set to start March 26, with teams ready to play 162 games, before the coronavirus pandemic broke out. A truncated 60-game schedule, played in empty ballparks, just got underway Thursday.

“It’s fair to say guys are concerned about things,” Mattingly said. “They want how they’re feeling about the situation to be heard. I think it’s fair. We’re talking about health.”

A representative of the Major League Baseball Players Association declined to comment Monday.

The NBA and the NHL hope to restart action later this week with no fans in the stands.

The NFL is less than two months from its regular season kickoff, but the resumption of play is far from certain.

The Minnesota Vikings said Monday that head trainer Eric Sugarman, pictured attending to a Vikings player in 2013, had tested positive for the coronavirus.Nam Y. Huh / AP file

The Minnesota Vikings disclosed Monday that their head trainer and COVID-19 point man, Eric Sugarman, has tested positive for the coronavirus.

“This weekend my family and I tested positive for COVID-19,” Sugarman said in a statement. He holds multiple titles with the team, including head athletic trainer, vice president of sports medicine and infection control officer.

“We immediately quarantined and began to follow the established protocols. At this time we are all doing fine and experiencing only mild symptoms.”

Associated Press contributed.

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