2020 MLB Season: Baseball in a COVID-19 world, a blueprint

DETROIT, MI - JULY 05: A detailed view of an official Major League Baseball with a surgical mask placed on it sitting on the dugout during the Detroit Tigers Summer Workouts at Comerica Park on July 5, 2020 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Mark Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images)
DETROIT, MI - JULY 05: A detailed view of an official Major League Baseball with a surgical mask placed on it sitting on the dugout during the Detroit Tigers Summer Workouts at Comerica Park on July 5, 2020 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Mark Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images) /
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(Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)
(Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) /

Given the most recent developments, the 2020 MLB season hinges on baseball updating the current system. Here’s a blueprint for how to do that.

Alright, baseball, you won’t do the work to keep your players, coaches, and staff members safe. So, since you’re all about dollars and cents, I’ll give you a blueprint for how to pull off the 2020 MLB season during a worldwide pandemic completely FREE of charge.

ONE – First and foremost, it’s too late to institute a bubble, which I’ll give Rob Manfred credit for because it is the first idea proposed by his camp and rejected by players. It’s not too late to implement a league-wide rapid testing system.

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10 teams have already opted-in to use a  rapid COVID-19 antigen testing system designed by two Dallas-based companies Viviature and Diamond Physicians, according to The Dallas Morning News. There’s no excuse for such a system not to be used by all 30-MLB teams.

The current system MLB currently utilizes requires tests to be conducted every 48-hours, and we’ve already seen instances in which results aren’t produced before the next test is to be administered, rendering them useless.

Already, during the 2020 MLB season, we’ve seen two examples in which this system has failed. The first occurred hours before the first pitch of the season was delivered last Thursday, when it was reported that Juan Soto of the Washington Nationals had tested positive for COVID-19.

That test was administered on Tuesday, 48-hours before, and in the time in between, Soto participated in practice and workouts, potentially exposing other Nats players to the virus. The opening series between the Nats and the New York Yankees proceeded despite this fact.

Thankfully, no one else has tested positive on either team… yet.

Related Story. MLB COVID oubreak: It's Time to Reconsider the Bubble. light

The second occurrence happened this weekend in a series between the Marlins and the Philadelphia Phillies. Four Marlins players had already tested positive for COVID-19 but the results of the most recent test hadn’t been delivered before game-time on Sunday, thus the players decided to play.

Come Monday, 14 members of the Marlins, it turns out, also tested positive for the virus, potentially exposing members of the Phillies who were set to kick off a 2-game series against the Yankees on Monday. Thankfully, that game was canceled until the results of a more recent test are delivered and all teams can be assured that there are no COVID-positive players on the field.

All of this can be avoided with a  rapid test, which brings me to…