It was an aside that Twins fans all over Minnesota could relate to. Amid a press briefing on the state's efforts to fight coronavirus, answering a question about testing capacity, Jan Malcolm, commissioner of the state's Department of Health, voiced the frustration that sports fans everywhere feel during this pandemic.
"I sure miss having [Twins games] as a recreational thing to look forward to," Malcolm said.
Major League Baseball is taking steps to address that craving. On Saturday, the sport's detailed plans to address player safety during what it hopes will be a captivating, if shortened, 2020 season, leaked to several national media outlets.
The blueprint makes clear that baseball in these unprecedented conditions will look strange and may feel foreign, but also that MLB believes that games can be played without spreading the virus.
The players union and MLB's team owners must agree to safety protocols and financial arrangements before spring camps can open by the league's mid-June target.
MLB's proposal, according to ESPN, envisions keeping players separate as much as possible and masked everywhere but on the field, with restrictions on who can be in the dugout and where they can sit or stand, plus changes to everything from pregame meetings (hold them online or outside) to postgame showers (not at the ballpark, please) and meals (in individual containers, not a buffet spread).
Baseballs touched by more than one or two players would be discarded, and pitchers would be issued their own set of baseballs to warm up with.
Mostly, the plan emphasizes constant and universal coronavirus testing for everyone at the ballpark, with immediate quarantine for anyone who tests positive. MLB has contracted with a Utah firm to collect hundreds of samples each day and return results within 24 hours; players and staff would also have their temperature taken each day to help identity possible carriers.