SEATTLE — The Seattle Mariners are seeking alternative options for their season-opening series after Washington Gov. Jay Inslee announced Wednesday a ban on all large gatherings in the three counties of the Seattle metro area because of the virus outbreak.
Inslee said social gatherings of 250 or more people, including sporting events, are banned through at least the end of March because of the COVID-19 outbreak in the Seattle area. Officials said gatherings of under 250 could also be barred unless specific measures are followed.
That decision impacts the Mariners’ first seven games of the Major League Baseball season against the Texas Rangers (March 26-29) and Minnesota Twins (March 30-April 1), plus home games for the MLS Seattle Sounders, XFL Seattle Dragons and a pair of junior hockey teams in the area.
In a statement, the Mariners said they are working with MLB to find alternatives for the games scheduled during their opening homestand.
“While we hope to be back to playing baseball in Seattle as soon as possible, the health and safety of our community is the most important consideration. We will provide more information about our plans for the games as it becomes available,” the Mariners said in their statement.
MLB could shift the Rangers-Mariners four-game series to Texas. The Rangers are set to open a retractable-rood stadium this year, and Texas general manager Jon Daniels said this week the park would be ready if need be.
“I think we’re just, everybody has to be open to what the experts say,” Texas pitcher Corey Kluber said at the Rangers’ camp in Surprise, Arizona. “None of us are experts. If I was trying to say whether something was good or bad, I’d be speaking without knowledge of the situation.”
The restrictions are just for the Seattle metro area and do not include Spokane where NCAA Tournament games are scheduled to take place next week. The men’s first and second rounds are being played at the Spokane Arena, while early rounds of the women’s tournament could end up being played on campus at Gonzaga.
The Seattle area is dealing with the worst COVID-19 outbreak in the country — there have been 19 deaths from the same suburban nursing home. Inslee said Tuesday the state is preparing for potentially tens of thousands of cases, based on estimates of the spread of the disease.
For most people, the new coronavirus causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia.
The vast majority of people recover from the new virus. According to the WHO, people with mild illness recover in about two weeks. Those with more severe illness may take three to six weeks to recover. In mainland China, where the virus first exploded, more than 80,000 people have been diagnosed and more than 63,000 so far have recovered.
After the opening homestand, the Mariners are not scheduled to play at home again until April 9-14 against Boston and Washington.
The impact will be less on the Sounders, who have just one home game — March 21 vs. FC Dallas — until April 18. The Sounders played their first two matches of the MLS regular season at home, including last Saturday when an announced crowd for 33,080 showed up for their match against Columbus in the midst of the outbreak.
The XFL Seattle Dragons are scheduled to host Los Angeles on Sunday and New York on March 22.
About 45 minutes south of Seattle, Tacoma’s home game against San Diego in the second-tier United Soccer League Championship on Wednesday night was to be played in an empty stadium.
The Mariners’ options could also include playing home games at the team’s spring training facility in Arizona, moving them to another open venue, or trying to switch scheduled home games with the Rangers and Twins.
On Tuesday, Texas Rangers catcher Robinson Chirinos said he was “a little bit” concerned about traveling to Seattle for the opening series considering what was happening with the virus in the area.
“I know the season starts in Seattle, and we know how Seattle is right now,” Chirinos said Tuesday. “That’s 2½ weeks from now, so I think we’re going to hear some news when we’re getting close to opening day. Right now, it’s starting the season in Seattle and see what happens in 2½ weeks.”
It’s not the first time the Mariners had scheduled regular-season games moved out of Seattle. During the 1994 season, ceiling tiles fell from the roof of the Kingdome, prompting the Mariners to play the final 20 games of the strike-shortened season on the road. Thirteen of those 20 games were originally scheduled to be played in Seattle.
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