Back in June
I wondered how meaningful baseball would be if it were played in a highly
condensed season.
So now, as a
lifelong fan of the St. Louis Cardinals…..it really means nothing.
The outbreak
on the Redbirds has essentially ended their season. Even if they got control of
the virus on the Cardinal bench, they haven’t even practiced but two days in
the last couple of weeks. If they resume, they can’t come close to playing the
60-game shortened season. If the Pirate series is postponed, they will have more
than twice as many games postponed…than games played.
One National
League manager suggested the whole idea of legitimacy for baseball this season
is a “slippery slope.”
As far as
I’m concerned….it’s over.
You can’t
play 55 games in 45 days and permanently risk the arms of your pitching staff.
It is not
just the Cards. Over half of the league’s 30 teams woke up Saturday with
14-plus games played. The Cards, Marlins and Phillies have decimated the
schedule.
So the
question is: Why are we going forward? The legitimacy of every National League
team who gets to avoid the defending Central Division Champions on their
schedule has to be questioned. This is quickly being revealed as a bogus way
for Major League Baseball to collect television revenues.
Shut it
down. There’s always next year.
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