TORONTO -- The Baltimore Orioles and the state of Maryland have talked about the team sharing Oriole Park at Camden Yards with the displaced Toronto Blue Jays amid the coronavirus pandemic.
The Blue Jays are looking for a major league park after the Canadian government declined to allow them to play in Toronto, and the state of Pennsylvania nixed a deal to play in Pittsburgh because of frequent travel throughout the United States.
Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan acknowledged in an interview with The Associated Press there have been talks about the state hosting the Blue Jays.
"We've had some discussions with the Orioles. I don't know the final details of that. Obviously, we're watching our numbers very carefully every day. We're concerned about the spikes in other states. I know [MLB] is also taking a look at it day to day," Hogan told the AP.
"We're not ready to put fans in the stands, but if you have, you know, a couple of guys standing in the field with masks on, pretty far distanced from each other, and they can figure out a way to do it safely, maybe it can happen."
Michael Ricci, a spokesman for Hogan, said discussions are still happening "but we don't have any announcement to make right now just yet."
"Maryland Stadium Authority is talking to the Orioles about it, so that's where the discussions currently are on the state level, and then I think once they've kind of come to an agreement on something, they'll bring it to the governor and the health department," Ricci told the AP.
A source familiar with the matter told the AP the Orioles are engaged in talks with the Blue Jays about playing "home games" at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. The official said the Orioles are trying to help the Blue Jays however they can, but that there are lots of logistics to be worked through, in terms of feasibility. The official said the Blue Jays would build a makeshift clubhouse in the stadium concourse in one scenario.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly on the matter, said the Blue Jays are working on other contingencies, too.
Toronto begins the season at Tampa Bay on Friday and is scheduled to play its first home game July 29 against the defending champion Washington Nationals.
The Blue Jays might find it hard to get clearance to play in Baltimore, as COVID-19 cases doubled in the city in the past month. Masks will be mandatory in indoor public spaces starting Friday, and Mayor Bernard Young announced a halt to indoor dining about a month after allowing restaurants to be half-full.
Dr. Rachel Levine, Pennsylvania's secretary of health, noted a significant increase in the number of cases in southwestern Pennsylvania and the risk of adding travelers to the region as the reason to decline the Blue Jays' request to play in Pittsburgh. The Blue Jays and the Pirates had an agreement to for the team to play at PNC Park, pending state approval.
But the number of new confirmed cases of the coronavirus reported daily by Allegheny County -- which includes Pittsburgh and 1.2 million residents -- has increased tenfold in the past two weeks, and the state rejected the plan.
Blue Jays general manager Ross Atkins said this week his team had more than five contingency plans for a home stadium and was in talks with other teams.
Atkins said if the Blue Jays can't find a major league park, their Triple-A affiliate in Buffalo, New York, would be their most likely site for home games. But based on what the players want and the collaboration they are getting from other teams and MLB, Atkins said the Blue Jays are focused on major league parks, as long as they can be safe. He said health and safety is the priority, so the ability to be socially distant without comprising other teams' ability to maintain social distance is important.
The team had been considering playing home games at its training facility in Dunedin, Florida, but that is among the states that are virus hot spots.
If a major league stadium can't be found, the Blue Jays could be facing a 60-game road trip, playing opposing teams in their own ballparks instead of a home park.