
Major League Baseball recently put together a 67-page manual outlining safety protocols that will need to be followed if players and other team personnel are going to return to play in a few weeks for training and in early July for a truncated season.
The reported measures range from the mundane to the seemingly extreme to the borderline impossible, and they all underscore the fundamental question: Is this worth it?
That can be viewed through two lenses: Is it worth having a season if all these measures — which we'll get to in a bit — need to be followed?
To that, I would answer with a measured "yes." If MLB and players are determined to have a season, they must do so in the most responsible way possible. If that means exhibiting what seems like an overabundance of caution, so be it. That's what the coronavirus pandemic calls for.
The other lens, though, is more complicated: If MLB needs to draft a 67-page (and likely ultimately longer) set of safety guidelines just to hold a season, is it really safe enough — and ultimately worth it from that perspective — to have a season? That's a fundamental question players are wrestling with, and for good reason. Baseball is not an essential service. It's a luxury. If there wasn't so much money at stake, would there really be such a scramble to re-start sports?
To understand both sides of this question, here are 10 of the most notable measures in the safety proposal, as reported by a variety of sources (the manual itself has not been published in full), along with a comment on each:
*Those not participating in a game would sit 6 feet apart — possibly in the stands or other auxiliary seating areas — and they would be wearing masks. That seems like common sense and easily doable, even if the optics while watching on TV might seem strange.
*No high-fives, fist-bumps, hugging, spitting, chewing tobacco or sunflower seeds. If all those things wind up being part of the final protocol and a season really happens, it seems like some of these would be both hard to enforce and could detract from some of the spontaneous emotion that adds to the environment of a game. I'm trying to imagine a walk-off home run under these conditions, even if they are created with good intentions.