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The
tentative reopening of sport in North America gathers pace this weekend
with a PGA-Tour backed golf event in Florida and the return of NASCAR
in North Carolina.
Sans the Confederate flag.
The
events come as professional sports leagues across the region are
attempting to hammer out solutions which will allow them to resume or
save seasons put on hold by the coronavirus pandemic.
Here is an update of where other major sport leagues stand as they map out their road to a return.
BASEBALL
Major
League Baseball owners have approved a plan which will see a
drastically shortened season starting in early July at ballparks which
will be closed to spectators.
The
baseball season was due to start on March 26 but was put on hold as the
COVID-19 crisis erupted. It means teams now face the prospect of an
82-game campaign instead of the usual 162-game marathon.
The
structure of the abbreviated season will also be radically different,
with teams mostly playing against opponents from their own divisions, as
well as the same division in the opposite league. The move will cut
down travel and expenses.
Any
return, however, would require backing from the MLB Players
Association, which has voiced misgivings about owners' proposals to
restructure player contracts for 2020 to help absorb financial losses
estimated at roughly $100 million per team.
FOOTBALL🏈
Major
League Soccer shut down in March after only two weeks of the season and
arguably has more to lose than many other professional sports from a
protracted suspension of competition.
MLS
clubs derive the bulk of their earnings from game-day revenues, meaning
the league will face a brutal financial hit until fans are allowed back
in the stadiums.
Reports
this week have suggested that MLS chiefs are aiming to end the shutdown
by sending all 26 teams to Florida to participate in a stand alone
tournament played inside a secure "bubble" at Disney World's ESPN Wide
World of Sports complex.
According
to the MLS proposal, teams would head to Florida in June for one month
of training, before the tournament kicks off roughly three to four weeks
later.
The
games would not be part of the regular season, and it remains unclear
when or if the formal 2020 campaign would be completed.
BASKETBALL 🏀
The
National Basketball Association is reportedly eyeing a return which
will see all 30 teams based in one or two locations, with Orlando and
Las Vegas believed to be the front-runners.
However, the fine detail of what an eventual return to competition will look like remains shrouded in uncertainty.
While
any return is expected to take place in empty arenas, it is unclear
whether the resumption will pick up where the regular season left off in
March, or whether the league will jump straight into an expanded
playoffs with a play-in to determine teams beyond the usual 16 spots.
NBA
Commissioner Adam Silver has told players that in the absence of a
COVID-19 vaccine, fan-less arenas may be a feature of the league into
2021.
Silver
said this week the league expects to study outbreak and testing
developments for another two to four weeks before making a decision
about a return to competition.
HOCKEY
With
coronavirus shutting down the National Hockey League just days before
regular season was supposed to end on April 4, the league could jump
straight into the playoffs if and when it returns.
NHL
commissioner Gary Bettman this week voiced his determination to finish
the season but stressed that any modified format would have to preserve
the integrity of the competition.
"It's
got to be fair, it's got to have integrity, and if we have to do it
over the summer on some modified basis, then we'll do it on that basis,"
Bettman said.
The
NHL is reportedly planning to structure a return around four "hub"
cities, with teams almost certainly playing in empty arenas.
The
New York Post meanwhile has reported that one reopening plan under
consideration is a 24-team tournament that would include a
best-of-three, play-in round.