MLB

Unvaccinated MLB players won't be allowed into Canada to play Blue Jays

Major League Baseball players who are not vaccinated against the coronavirus won't be allowed to travel into Canada to face the Blue Jays in Canada and won't be paid for those games.

Canada's government requires a person to have 2nd vaccine dose 14 days prior to entry

Toronto Blue Jays designated hitter Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (27) and teammate Bo Bichette, seen here during MLB action in October 2021, were among the players to report to spring training on Friday after the MLB lockout ended. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

Major League Baseball players who are not vaccinated against the coronavirus won't be allowed to travel into Canada to face the Blue Jays in Canada and won't be paid for those games.

Canada's government requires a person must have received a second vaccine dose — or one dose of Johnson & Johnson — at least 14 days prior to entry.

"The parties have agreed that any player who, as a result of such a governmental regulation is unable or ineligible to play in a championship season game [or games] due to his vaccination status will be ineligible for placement on the COVID-19 IL, but rather may be placed on the restricted list... without pay or the accrual of credited major league service, during such period of unavailability," according to a letter from union deputy general counsel Matt Nussbaum to MLB senior vice president Patrick Houlihan, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press.

The agreement was first reported by Boston television station WCVB.

Toronto opens at home against Texas on April 8.

"It's a concern," union head Tony Clark said Friday. "I think as everyone knows — appreciate and respect the decisions that are made, particularly in regard to player health and community health. But that is an issue, as one in the pandemic itself, that we're navigating domestically, that we're going to have to continue to try to work through here moving forward."

The letter says the agreement covering unvaccinated players and travel to Canada expires at the end of the 2022 season.

Blue Jays stars report to spring training

The Blue Jays have preparations underway for the upcoming Major League Baseball season — their first full campaign back in Toronto since 2019.

A lockout threatened to cancel the 2022 season until an agreement was reached between MLB and its players' association late Thursday. Toronto had its 2020 and 2021 seasons disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, with the Blue Jays only playing half of their home games — often with limited capacity — at Rogers Centre.

Capacity limits will be lifted in Ontario by the time Toronto hosts the Texas Rangers in their home opener on April 8, but COVID-19 regulations will still potentially impact the rosters of visiting clubs.

Sources confirmed to The Canadian Press on Friday that players on teams visiting the Blue Jays who are not fully vaccinated would be placed on a restricted list for the length of their series in Toronto.

Putting players on the restricted list will open up roster spots for the visiting team. The unvaccinated players will not enter Canada.

An MLB spokesman said that by the end of the 2021 season more than 88 per cent of the league's Tier 1 personnel — players and key staff who have access to players — were fully vaccinated.

The Blue Jays themselves got to work on Friday morning.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Bo Bichette, Teoscar Herandez, Ryan Borucki among other players reported to the Blue Jays' training facility in Dunedin, Fla., less than 24 hours after MLB settled its labour strife.

The new collective bargaining agreement raises the competitive-balance tax threshold by $34 million US over five years, up from a $21 million hike over the 2017-21 deal and an $11 million rise from 2011-16.

Young star players like Guerrero and Bichette were the biggest beneficiaries of the deal.

Shohei Ohtani earned $545,000 in 2018, when he was voted American League Rookie of the Year. Had the new agreement been in place then, he would have earned an additional $750,000.

Cody Bellinger was at $605,000 in 2019, when he won National League MVP. Under the new deal, he would have gotten an extra $2.5 million.

The 22-year-old Guerrero finished second in AL MVP voting last season, earning 269 votes to Ohtani's 420.

Guerrero finished last season with a .311 batting average, leading the majors with 48 home runs and 123 runs. His .401 on-base percentage, .601 slugging percentage, and 1.002 OPS were the best in the AL.

Blue Jays general manager Ross Atkins shored up Toronto's starting rotation before the lockout began on Dec. 2 when the previous collective bargaining agreement expired.

Right-handed pitcher Jose Berrios signed a $131-million, seven-year contract extension on Nov. 18, a year before his previous contact was set to expire.

The 27-year-old Berrios, who was set to become a free agent after the 2022 season, was acquired in late July in a trade with the Minnesota Twins. Berrios was effective and reliable over 12 starts for the Blue Jays, posting a 5-4 record and 3.58 earned-run average.

Atkins also signed veteran free agents Kevin Gausman and Yimi Garcia on Nov. 30, days before the lockout began.

Gausman, 31, agreed to a $110-million, five-year deal with Toronto after a 14-6 season with the San Francisco Giants. The righty had a 2.81 ERA over 192 innings in a major-league best 33 games started. He also struck out 227.

Garcia, 31, had a 4.21 ERA coming out of the bullpen for the Miami Marlins and Houston Astros with 15 saves and 60 strikeouts over 57.2 innings pitched.

It's expected that Atkins will continue to pursue free agent options to shore up Toronto's infield.

Preparations for the Blue Jays' full-time return to downtown Toronto are already underway. Metrolinx, which manages public transit in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area, said that it is prepared for an influx of baseball fans to Union Station.

"We are monitoring ridership very closely and will do our best to provide extra trains when big games or events are scheduled," said a spokesman from Metrolinx. "To provide assistance to customers who may be travelling to Union Station for the first time in years, we are ensuring extra staff are available to assist customers during events."

The Blue Jays first Grapefruit League game will be against the Baltimore Orioles on March 18 in Sarasota, Fla.

With Files from The Canadian Press

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