South Korean baseball league hopeful of salvaging full season despite coronavirus pandemic

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By Yoo Jee-ho

SEOUL, April 7 (Yonhap) — With each passing day, the South Korean baseball league is growing hopeful that it can still play a full, 144-game season, despite the wrench thrown by the coronavirus outbreak earlier in the year.

The 2020 regular season for the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) would have begun on March 28 under normal circumstances. But the COVID-19 pandemic forced the KBO, much as all other South Korean sports organizations, to put its season on hold.

The Kia Tigers play their intrasquad game at Gwangju-Kia Champions Field in Gwangju, 330 kilometers south of Seoul, on April 7, 2020. (Yonhap)
Chris Flexen (L) and Kim Kang-ryul of the Doosan Bears pitch in the bullpen at Jamsil Stadium in Seoul on April 7, 2020. (Yonhap)
Ryu Dae-hwan (C), secretary general of the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO), chairs an executive committee meeting with club general managers at the KBO headquarters in Seoul on April 7, 2020. (Yonhap)

The Kia Tigers play their intrasquad game at Gwangju-Kia Champions Field in Gwangju, 330 kilometers south of Seoul, on April 7, 2020. (Yonhap)

Even as volleyball and basketball seasons were being canceled, and the football league wasn’t even discussing a new kickoff date, the KBO, almost defiantly, kept its sights set on a late April or an early May start. As long as the season begins in the first week of May, league officials said, there will be enough of a window to salvage a 144-game season.

What once seemed like a highly unlikely scenario has become an almost feasible proposition this week, as the number of new virus cases stayed below 50 for two consecutive days.

That has fed optimism around the league.

“The recent downward trend has obviously impacted our discussions,” said KBO’s secretary general Ryu Dae-hwan, following an executive committee meeting with club general managers. “As long as we can start the season in early May, we’ll be able to finish everything by the end of November.”

The latest conclusion to a KBO season came in 2018, when the SK Wyverns knocked off the Doosan Bears in Game 6 of the best-of-seven Korean Series on Nov. 12. That season included an 18-day, midseason break to accommodate the Asian Games in Indonesia, with the national team being represented by KBO stars.

This year’s original schedule also included an 18-day layoff for the Tokyo Olympics from July to August. But the Olympic Games have since been postponed to next year, giving the KBO some leeway. The KBO has already canceled All-Star festivities, and Ryu reiterated on Tuesday that an early May start will necessitate double headers and games on Mondays, normally a designated off day in the KBO.

The recent drop in COVID-19 cases also keeps the KBO on course to begin the preseason on April 21. To prevent the spread of the virus, teams are only allowed to play intrasquad games at their own stadiums, with no traveling allowed. But if the preseason begins on time, the league’s 10 clubs will be able to play one another, albeit with limited traveling. The league will schedule games so that only teams that are close to each other will be playing and visiting teams will be able to return to their home cities the same day.

Trying not to sound too giddy in this public health crisis, Ryu said the KBO’s plan will only hinge upon how well the virus is contained in the coming days.

“We’re seeing fewer than 50 cases, but we feel that the number will have to be far lower than that,” Ryu said. “There are a lot of factors we have to consider. Government guidelines are important, too.”

Even if the KBO gets its wishes and begins the regular season in early May, at least some of the early contests will be played behind closed doors, Ryu said.

One possibility is for the teams to start playing without fans and then to gradually increase the number of spectators. For instance, a team whose home stadium sits 20,000 could first sell only 10 percent of the seats and make sure those 2,000 fans are spread apart across the ballpark. And then the team could increase that number to 20 or 30 percent of the seats, depending on how well the virus is contained by then.

And to ensure the safety of players and others involved in crowdless games, the KBO came up with its own set of guidelines.

Players and coaches will be “strongly recommended” to wear masks in all areas of the stadium, except for the dugouts and the field. Umpires and official scorers will be required to wear masks at all times during games, and their travel from one stadium to another will be kept to a minimum.

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TFC president Bill Manning bullish that MLS will charge ahead this year — Toronto Sun

Toronto FC president Bill Manning is not parading around the city these days dressed like a one-man band, with a guitar in his arms, cymbals between his knees and a harmonica strapped below his mouth singing all is well. Read More

TFC president Bill Manning bullish that MLS will charge ahead this year — Toronto Sun

By Steve Buffery

Toronto FC president Bill Manning is not parading around the city these days dressed like a one-man band, with a guitar in his arms, cymbals between his knees and a harmonica strapped below his mouth singing all is well.

Manning is both realistic and pragmatic, and is quick to point out that he has no inside information as to when the 2020 MLS season will resume (or even if it will this year) or when team training will begin (last week, MLS extended the team training moratorium through April 24 because of the COVID-19 pandemic).

However, the two-time MLS executive of the year remains bullish that there will be a 2020 season and that MLS — a league that struggled big-time in its first few years of operation — will come out of the coronavirus crisis in good shape.

“I am (optimistic),” Manning told the Toronto Sun on Monday. “And I hope that we can play and play a full season. How that will look like and what shape it’s going to come in, I don’t know. (But) certainly in soccer you can play multiple games a week. With football that’s more difficult, though we do have bye weeks in the CFL that you can do away with it.

“So I am trying to stay optimistic,” he said. “But I’m also realistic that we don’t know the answer.”

Big celebrations were planned for MLS this season — its 25th season of operation. MLS is a league that many predicted years ago would not survive. But not only has it survived, it has thrived.

In recent years, franchise values have gone through the roof. Last year Forbes listed TFC as being worth $395 million.

Expansion fees have risen over the years, the newest MLS teams, Cincinnati and Nashville, paid $150 million to join in 2019 and 2020. (In 2012, Montreal Impact owners paid $40 million to join MLS).

Still, MLS is a gate-driven league and with the game, like pro sports around the world, on hiatus with no resumption date clearly in sight (May 10 at the very earliest), worries build as the COVID-19 crisis continues.

But Manning has faith in MLS leadership, particularly commissioner Don Garber, who has navigated the league through some very tough times, and the league’s ever-growing and loyal fan base.

“I think the league is a far cry from what it was in 1996,” Manning said. “Much like the other leagues, our intention is to get through this. I think the one thing about sports is, it brings communities together (and) I think MLS has really found it’s niche in the sports market place. It’s no longer a second-tier league. It’s there with some of the more established leagues because it’s found its place, its place in communities, and we’ve seen that with TFC.

“We’ll certainly get back, just like the NBA and the NHL, and hopefully be able to deliver a lot of fond memories for our fans because, after this, we’re all going to need a lot of good things to happen and to take place,” the Massapequa, N.Y., native continued.

As for his own club, Manning said it’s important that a routine has been set up as players adjust to self-isolation. In that regard, the club has set up video training and conferencing. Bikes, weights and other training apparatus have been sent to everyone. The players even get two meals delivered to their respective homes and condos every day, prepared at the BMO Training Ground by head chef Elaine Flamenco and her team.

“It’s just something again to try to keep a normal routine for our players because we always do a pre-workout meal and a post-workout meal,” Manning said. “(The chefs) come in and get sanitized after every cleaning and then they do it again. I think it’s really important our players get what they need and have that little bit of a sense of normalcy.”

Overall, Manning said the players are doing well and are staying on top of their fitness as best as they can. They’ve all remained in the Toronto area with the exception of two players — who were granted permission to return home — one to the U.S. and another to a different part of Canada (Manning did not want to reveal their names). Other than centre back Chris Mavinga, who lost an uncle in France to COVID-19, Manning said that the players and their families have remained healthy during the crisis.

“The guys for the most part feel positive, enthusiastic, they’re been in good spirits,” he said. “Obviously they want to get back to playing but for the most part it’s been a spirit of camaraderie that sometimes during things like this just brings people together.”

Like many people, Manning is champing at the bit hoping games will resume sooner rather than later.

“Sports are a luxury,” he said “But with that said, sports is also massively important to a lot of people and is a huge part of their daily routines. I can’t tell you how many texts and Emails I’ve gotten from different people just saying I miss my TFC and my sports.

“As much as the world doesn’t revolve around sports, certainly by any measure, it is a big part of people’s lives. I think that in some ways when the teams are back training again and games are being played, that’s when I think the community will be, from a psychological stand-point, in a much, much better place. Because you’re back to this normal world where you can go out and enjoy the teams.

“When that happens, that will be really good for the public.”

They will be playing baseball in Korea before the U.S. — HardballTalk | NBC Sports

Even if South Korea is ahead of the U.S. in responding to COVID-19, the return of sports is precarious at best.

They will be playing baseball in Korea before the U.S. — HardballTalk | NBC Sports

The first confirmed case of COVID-19 in the United States and the first confirmed case of COVID-19 in South Korea occurred on the same day. In the two months since then the course of each country’s outbreak has been radically different.

As of a week ago, the United States was reporting around 15 times more confirmed COVID-19 cases and deaths than South Korea despite having only about six times the population. South Korea has likewise reduced its rate of new daily cases to one-tenth of its peak while the United States likely won’t see its peak for some time.

The biggest factor in that disparity is that South Korea began ramping up testing more quickly and implementing preventive measures, such as school closures and stay-at-home orders earlier and in uniform, as opposed to piecemeal fashion as we have done in the U.S. South Korea is not out of the woods yet — they are currently bracing for a second wave of COVID-19 — but they flattened the curve more effectively and are thus ahead of us on the timeline.

This is obviously a phenomenon with society-wide implications, but for our purposes here, it has implications for professional sports as well. To that end, ESPN published a story today about how KBO baseball in Korea is likely to be the first major professional sports league to resume its schedule. The story focuses on former major league pitcher Dan Straily, who now pitches for the Lotte Giants of the KBO. He talks about how his team and league in Korea have approached things there with respect to training and communication and things of that nature.

It’s an interesting read, but my biggest takeaway from it is not necessarily about what we should have done vs. what Korea has done or anything like that. I mean, there are countless ways the United States has completely screwed up its COVID-19 response via incompetence and worse, but this ESPN article does not get into that in a super effective way, nor does it take into account various differences between the U.S. and South Korea, separate and apart from the competence of its leaders, which would likely have led to at least some level of disparate results regardless. That’a a topic best left to a more in-depth article.

No, my biggest takeaway is how precarious and uncertain the return of baseball is even in South Korea, where things have gone better than in most places. As the article notes, one sick player, one sick trainer, and the timeline will be pushed back farther. And even if that doesn’t happen, the normal acts of ballplayers — getting a new ball from the ballboy to the ump to the catcher to the pitcher —  are all coming under new scrutiny and are cloaked in uncertainty and unease.

It’s the sort of thing that makes me seriously question whether professional sports can come back on anything approaching the timeline those in power are currently envisioning. And whether they should be coming back this year at all.

California Governor Disputes Trump’s Timeline Of Sports With Fans — NESN.com

United States President Donald Trump held a conference call with commissioners of the 13 major U.S. sports leagues Saturday, saying he believes the 2020 NFL season should start on time. He’s also hopeful spectators will be allowed back in stadiums and arenas in August and September, but who’s to say if that’s an accurate timeline,…

California Governor Disputes Trump’s Timeline Of Sports With Fans — NESN.com

United States President Donald Trump held a conference call with commissioners of the 13 major U.S. sports leagues Saturday, saying he believes the 2020 NFL season should start on time. He’s also hopeful spectators will be allowed back in stadiums and arenas in August and September, but who’s to say if that’s an accurate timeline, as we’re all at the mercy of the coronavirus outbreak. For California’s governor, that feels like a long-shot.

“I’m not anticipating that happens in this state,” Governor Gavin Newsom said on MSNBC. “We’ve all seen the headlines over the last couple days in Asia where they were opening up certain businesses. Now they’re starting to  roll back those openings because they’re starting to see some spread. There’s a boomerang.”

Newsom’s biggest concern is setting a concrete date prematurely amid an unprecedented period of uncertainty. That’s why, when people in the sports world have reached out to him with questions, he’s urged them to be careful and not jump the gun.

“One has to be very cautious here, one has to be careful not to overpromise,” Newsom said. “It’s interesting, I have a lot of friends that work in Major League Baseball and in the NFL. They’ve been asking me, in fact, a well known athlete just asked me, a football player, if he expects to come back. I said, ‘I would move very cautiously in that expectation.’ Look, I’m not here to second guess anybody, but I am here to say this. Our decision on that basis, at least here in the state of California, will be determined by the facts, will be determined by the health experts, will be determined by the capacity to meet this moment, bend the curve and have the appropriate community surveillance and testing to confidently determine whether or not that’s appropriate. And right now, I’m just focusing on the immediate, but that’s not something I anticipate happening in the next few months.”

The first coronavirus case in the state of California was reported on Jan. 25 with 12,573 cases reported and 282 deaths, according to the New York Times.

Read more at: https://nesn.com/2020/04/california-governor-disputes-trumps-timeline-of-sports-with-fans/

NBA, along with Knicks, Nets, contribute 1 million surgical masks to New York —

The NBA, along with the New York Knicks and Brooklyn Nets, are donating 1 million surgical masks, necessary PPE as medical workers fight coronavirus.

NBA, along with Knicks, Nets, contribute 1 million surgical masks to New York —

New York has been one of the epicenters of the coronavirus pandemic in the United States. As of Saturday, New York City had accounted for more than 1,900 deaths, according to the latest tracking data from Johns Hopkins University. 

With hospitals overwhelmed, medical workers are running low on the personal protective equipment (PPE) necessary to keep themselves protected from the virus. That’s what makes the latest gesture from the NBA and the two local teams, the New York Knicks and Brooklyn Nets, all the more important. 

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced that the league, in collaboration with the Knicks, Nets and China’s Consul General Huang Ping, is contributing one million surgical masks for the state’s essential workers. 

“New York thanks you,” Cuomo wrote on Twitter. “We are beyond grateful for this gift of critically needed PPE.”Andrew Cuomo@NYGovCuomo

NEW: The @NBA is contributing 1 million desperately needed surgical masks for New York’s essential workers in collaboration with @nyknicks, @BrooklynNets and China’s Consul General Huang Ping.

New York thanks you.

We are beyond grateful for this gift of critically needed PPE.19.7KTwitter Ads info and privacy3,370 people are talking about this

New York reported 630 coronavirus-related deaths on Friday, the deadliest day thus far. Earlier Saturday, Cuomo announced the donation of 1,000 ventilators from the Chinese government. 

The New England Patriots sent their team plane to China this week to pick up 1.2 million masks, with an additional 500,000 on the way. Owner Robert Kraft sent 300,000 of those masks to New York. 

Horses will remain at the Woodbine backstretch through the Covid-19 outbreak — Toronto Sun

Read More

Horses will remain at the Woodbine backstretch through the Covid-19 outbreak — Toronto Sun

By Steve Bufferry

The horses at the Woodbine Racetrack backstretch will continue to be cared for throughout the COVID-19 outbreak.Woodbine Entertainment announced on Tuesday that it remains committed to stabling horses on its backstretch, even though the start date for the 2020 thoroughbred racing season has been postponed.

“These horses need a home and our land and facilities were created exactly for the purpose of caring for these animals,” said Jim Lawson, CEO of Woodbine Entertainment.“Furthermore, horse people have requested that we keep our backstretch open and we have only done so in accordance with the government deeming stabling an essential business. We have also followed strict government direction to minimize the risk in the spread of COVID-19.”

The Woodbine season was supposed to begin on April 18. No new start date has been announced. To date, there have been no reported cases of COVID-19 in the Woodbine backstretch.

MoreL Horses will remain at the Woodbine backstretch through the Covid-19 outbreak — Toronto Sun

Santa Anita to remain closed; Saturday’s Santa Anita Derby to be rescheduled — Press Telegram

Santa Anita will remain closed for racing, at least through the upcoming weekend, as a result of last week’s order by the Los Angeles County Health Department, according to a track press release Tuesday. The $1 million Santa Anita Derby and Santa Anita Oaks, the track’s premier races for 3-year-old colts and fillies, were scheduled for Saturday but will be rescheduled once racing resumes. …

Santa Anita to remain closed; Saturday’s Santa Anita Derby to be rescheduled — Press Telegram

Remy Martin Declares for NBA Draft — Sports360AZ

Arizona State’s Remy Martin started his career as a spark off the bench in the inception of the 2017 “Guard U” team. He quickly developed into one of the most reliable players in the Bobby Hurley era. On Monday, Martin declared for the 2020 NBA Draft. Arizona State junior point guard Remy Martin has declared […]

Remy Martin Declares for NBA Draft — Sports360AZ

The 6-foot, 170-pound point guard averaged 19.1 points, 4.1 assists and 33.8 minutes per game in his junior season. The 2020 All-Pac-12 First Team selection still has flexibility to return to the college ranks before June 15 if he does not hire an agent.

Sam Vecenie, who covers the NBA Draft for The Athletic, feels Martin should listen to feedback from the NBA before deciding whether to head to the draft. 

“Nothing about it here, but I hope Remy Martin keeps his options open to return to school,” Vecenie said in a tweet. “Don’t think he’s a top-100 NBA prospect right now, even though I think he made significant strides this year.”

Martin is the 2017 Pac-12 6th Man of the Year and a two-time All-Conference selection. 

The point guard is one of the highest-rated recruits to ever come to Tempe along with current Sun Devils Romello White and Kimani Lawrence.  Share Tweet Share

CFL postpones training camps — Toronto Sun

The COVID-19 pandemic has forced the Canadian Football League to postpone the opening of training camps next month. Read More

CFL postpones training camps — Toronto Sun

The COVID-19 pandemic has forced the Canadian Football League to postpone the opening of training camps next month.

“The ongoing global pandemic and the resulting directives issued by various governments make it unsafe to proceed with plans to gather our athletes and coaches together as scheduled,” Commissioner Randy Ambrosie said in a Monday release.

Rookie camps were due to open May 13, with the main camps to follow May 17. The full 81-game schedule would have kicked off June 11. The CFL did not issue new opening dates but the schedule will obviously have to be shortened significantly if the league hopes to have the Grey Cup played in Regina on Nov. 22.

League officials have said they could realistically go as low as eight games per team but no number has been decided on yet.

“As for our future plans, we are in the hands of our public health officials, the advice they are providing governments, and the directives those governments are issuing to us all, and we acknowledge their timetable will be dictated by the virus itself,” Ambrosie continued. “We will make further decisions when we can and share them with our fans and the public as soon as possible.

“The CFL and its member clubs would like to take this opportunity to thank our fans, partners, players, prospects, coaches and staff, for their dedication and patience as we face this challenge. We are facing it together, even if we have to be physically apart.”

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CFL postpones training camps — Toronto Sun

Lionel Messi agrees to 70% pay cut, will donate to club workers amid coronavirus pandemic —

Soccer star Lionel Messi and his Barcelona teammates agreed to a 70% pay cut amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Lionel Messi agrees to 70% pay cut, will donate to club workers amid coronavirus pandemic —

Soccer star Lionel Messi and his Barcelona teammates agreed to a 70% pay cut amid the coronavirus pandemic. 

Messi will also make an undisclosed financial contribution so that no Barcelona workers will have their wages docked with soccer suspended in the country because of Spain’s state of emergency — in place since March 12. Spain has had more than 85,000 COVID-19 positive cases and 7,000 deaths since the outbreak. 

Messi said in a statement posted to social media Sunday, speaking on behalf of Barcelona’s first-team players, that previous reports about team members rejecting the club’s proposal for salary cuts were misconstrued. According to ESPN, an agreement has been reached between the players and the club, affecting the men’s first team and all professional teams — including basketball. 

“We want to clarify that our desire has always been for a reduction to be applied to our salaries because we understand that this is an exceptional situation and we are the first that have ALWAYS helped the club with what they have asked of us,” the statement by Messi read.

“Many times we have even done things on our own accord, at moments when we felt it necessary or important to do so. For that reason, it surprises us that from inside the club there would be people that want to put us under a magnifying glass or try to pressure us into something that we were always clear we wanted to do. In fact, if the agreement has dragged on, it’s because we were looking for a formula to help the club and its workers in these difficult times.

“For our part, the moment has arrived to announce that, aside from the 70% wage cut during the State of Emergency, we are going to also make contributions so that all the club’s employees can earn 100% of their salaries for as long as this situation lasts.”

Sparks’ Sydney Wiese tests positive for the coronavirus — Daily News

The L.A. Sparks’ Sydney Wiese said Friday on social media that she has tested positive for COVID-19. Other than experiencing minor symptoms, including the possible tell-tale loss of taste and smell, she said she’s doing well and remains quarantined with her parents at their Phoenix home. The 24-year-old guard returned home to Phoenix from Spain…

Sparks’ Sydney Wiese tests positive for the coronavirus — Daily News