FORT MYERS, Fla. – The Major League Baseball season will not begin until mid-May at the earliest.
Commissioner Rob Manfred issued a statement Monday saying the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's recommendation that there not be gatherings of 50 or more people for the next eight weeks meant baseball games would not be played through at least that time frame. That would mean May 16 or later.
Opening Day already had been pushed back two weeks from March 26 to April 9.
"With the CDC announcement, we are not going to be playing April 9," Manfred told reporters in Jupiter, Fla., moments after meeting with MLB players association chief Tony Clark. "We are not going to announce an alternate Opening Day at this point."
Spring training camps have been closed since Thursday, with the league discouraging players from organized workouts at team facilities. Since then, thousands of players have returned home or headed to their city they play in, with small groups of players remaining at facilities.
Twins officials, including President of Baseball Operations Derek Falvey, left Florida and returned to Minnesota on Monday.
The MLB statement also said, "The commitment of the clubs is to play as many baseball games in 2020 as we can, consistent with the safety of our players and fans."
The shortest MLB season came in 1981, when a strike limited most teams to 107 games. The Twins played 113 games in 1994 before a strike ended the season Aug. 11. When play resumed in 1995, teams played 144 games.