COVID-19 Update: Changing Plans, Inconclusive Tests
The Marlins In Purgatory
As of now, the Marlins are scheduled for a Tuesday game in Baltimore. There is, as yet, no information on which players will be available, but the Marlins are behaving as if they’ll need some new blood: they’ve acquired Justin Shafer, Josh Smith, Mike Morin, and Richard Bleier in the last week, and signed Logan Forsythe. Given that the league’s testing protocol requires two negative tests more than 24 hours apart before a player can return to the field, they may need even more reinforcements on the hitting side as well.
The long-term effects of the last week’s postponements will be harder to plan. The Marlins have played only three games this year, which leaves them with a lot of ground to make up. They were originally scheduled to play Philadelphia in Miami this week before the Orioles and Yankees played an impromptu series to minimize cancelations. At some point, the team will be more or less back to its initial form, and they’ll have a lot of games to play.
Phillies Resume Play
The Phillies played no games last week after their potential exposure to Marlins players during their weekend series. Three employees tested positive for COVID in the team-wide testing done after the Marlins series: a coach, a home clubhouse staffer, and a visiting clubhouse staffer. The coach and home staffer’s tests were both, per the league, false positives, which means no players or home staffers tested positive for the coronavirus after the Marlins game.
Even so, the team has played only three games this year. They’ll resume play today in New York against the Yankees, with just as many games to make up as the Marlins, though with a far more complete roster. The normal weather-related complications of playing baseball in August will figure in as well — the Phillies faces an uphill road to the playoffs despite not having any positive tests among their players. That is unquestionably good (and far more important) news than the vagaries of their remaining schedule, but serves to underscore the difficulty of staging a season amidst a pandemic, even with everyone healthy.
Cardinals Await Clarity
After two Cardinals tested positive for COVID-19 before their series opener against the Brewers on Friday, the game was postponed. As more tests came in over the weekend, the entire series was canceled, as was today’s game against the Tigers in Detroit. As of now, tomorrow’s game against the Tigers is still on.
There are more tests still coming in, which has added to the confusion. Four further tests over the weekend — belonging to three staff members and one player — were inconclusive. Additionally, another player, who the team expected to test positive based on contact tracing of the two initial positive tests, also tested positive.
The team announced that it expects new testing results today, which could shed light on its next steps. While player names haven’t been released, the team has isolated those with confirmed positive tests — two have already returned to St. Louis — with the goal of continuing their season more quickly than the Marlins did.
The next week of games is very much up in the air, with much depending on how the results of further rounds of testing due today go. If no new members of the team test positive, it isn’t out of the question that they’d play tomorrow in Detroit. If more players test positive, or if the inconclusive results are re-tested and all are positive, more delays will likely follow.
Brewers Back on Track
While the Brewers missed a three-game series with the Cardinals, they never had any exposure, potential or otherwise, to the team. The Cardinals never even saw Miller Park, as they arrived in Milwaukee on an off day and were in lockdown at their hotel by 6 AM the next morning. The Brewers home opener, originally slated against the Cardinals on Friday, will instead be against the White Sox today.
The team didn’t escape the weekend without bad news, however. Bench coach Pat Murphy suffered a heart attack during a team activity on Saturday. Thankfully, he’s recovering well, and could leave the hospital as early as this week. Milwaukee will also be without two lineup stalwarts: Lorenzo Cain opted out of the season on Saturday and Ryan Braun hit the Injured List with an infected index finger.
At this point, it’s clear that a season free of COVID-19 interruptions is out of the question. Hopefully, there are no further outbreaks. If there are, however, the course of the Cardinals situation will be instructive for the league. The Marlins’ 20-person outbreak, if repeated elsewhere, would surely force an end to the season. St. Louis’ relative ability to contain positive tests, pending further results today, might allow the season to continue with fewer delayed games and wholesale changes to the schedule — assuming, of course, that MLB’s revised health and safety protocols prove to be effective. We have to hope they will be. Much more than baseball is on the line.