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Milwaukee – Seven St. Louis Cardinals players and six members tested positive for COVID-19, which led major leagues to postpone the team’s four-game series in Detroit.
The series scheduled to be played at Comerica Park from Tuesday to Thursday.
“You think about how temporarily something like this can spread,” said Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak. “Until it affects you, it may not affect you often, but needless to say we know it’s very genuine and we know it moves fast and quiet, but it can temporarily infect a lot of people.”
Mozeliak said five of those who tested positive had no symptoms. He said the others did: headache, cough, sniffing, mild fever.
“And of the eight, it’s a variety of symptoms, but nothing right now requires anything like hospitalization,” Mozeliak said.
The Cardinals have been quarantined since Thursday in Milwaukee, where their series with the Brewers was also postponed due to positive testing.
The cardinal comes after the Miami Marlins had an epidemic in their organization of travelers who marginalized part of their players, which generated considerations about this season’s viability shortened by the pandemic.
“So far, unfortunately, we have treated this the same way our country has treated it,” said Brewers Director Craig Counsell. “We developed well-meaning rules and protocols, then passed them on to 30 individual operators, that is, states, and asked them to do everything they could. Adherence and efforts to achieve a set of protocols and advice simply didn’t go well. It just didn’t go well.
“That’s because this virus is an amazing and complicated opponent. That gives us ball 8. I desperately need to play and finish the season, it’s so vital for so many people and so many places. But it’s not going well.” Right now. It’s not.”
Brewers outfielder Lorenzo Cain announced on Saturday that he will play the rest of the season and quote “all the uncertainties and unknowns surrounding our game right now.”
Counsell said monday that “it is to say that the news of the cardinals was shocking and that it would possibly have been the drop that filled the glass” for Cain.
While all members of the cardinals’ organization who tested positive for the test have returned home, the others remain remote in their Milwaukee hotel rooms.
He tests himself every day.
“The hope would be to return to St. Louis on Wednesday morning, exercise Wednesday afternoon and allow players to get their feet back on the move, their bodies moving,” Mozeliak said. “And then, on Thursday, do a more physically powerful workout, then play on Friday.”
St. Louis last played on July 29 in Minnesota and is expected to resume his schedule on Friday at the Chicago Cubs’ home.
Mozeliak said he wasn’t sure how the team could postpone some of the games that were eliminated with the postponement of two series.
“I didn’t think of our show any more than Friday’s gambling, hopefully,” Mozeliak said. “It’s hard to think about the long term when you’re literally looking to spend the day.”
The Cardinals are the moment the team left for the new coronavirus since the start of the season on July 23.
The Marlins are expected to resume the game Tuesday in Baltimore after a breakout in their organization that marked the players. Miami hasn’t played since July 26.
Because the outbreak occurred at the Citizens Bank Park clubhouse, the Phillies were out of the game for a week while daily testing was being conducted.
In some other virus development, the game Field of Dreams in Iowa has been postponed until 2021. He plays at a new ballpark at the cornfield adjacent to the 1989 movie site scheduled for August 13 in Dyersville.
The Chicago White Sox were scheduled to host the New York Yankees, who were replaced by St. Louis due to the new major league schedule. The White Sox will be one of the groups next year. The opponent has not been determined.
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