‘A disaster waiting to happen’: MLB plan for 60-game season sparks concern
John Axford loses track when trying to recall the number of people he would come into contact with in a typical day as a Major League Baseball player.
There’s the doorman he sees as he leaves his hotel, the restaurant staff that serves him lunch, the taxi driver that takes him to the stadium and the security guards who greet him when he gets there — and that’s all before he steps foot into a clubhouse full of players, coaches, trainers and staff.
Axford, a former Toronto Blue Jays pitcher from Port Dover, Ont., said he wasn’t surprised to hear of MLB’s plan to return with a 60-game regular season. But even if the league tries to reduce the number of interactions between its players and the outside world, Axford’s not convinced a season can safely begin during a pandemic.
“Your interactions (with other people) are quite numerous within a day, there are a lot of people involved,” Axford said from his Burlington, Ont., home.