TORONTO -- The displaced Toronto Blue Jays will play in Buffalo this year amid the coronavirus pandemic, the team announced Friday.
The Blue Jays will play at Sahlen Field, home of the team's Triple-A affiliate, the Buffalo Bisons.
"We are extremely grateful to have a home in Buffalo this season, thanks to the openness, creativity, and partnership of the Buffalo Bisons, Major League Baseball, and Blue Jays staff, who have worked tirelessly to prepare us for games at Sahlen Field," Blue Jays president and CEO Mark Shapiro said in a statement.
"This process has no doubt tested our team's resilience, but our players and staff refuse to make excuses -- we are determined to take the field on Opening Day today, and for the coming months, with the same intensity and competitiveness that our fans expect."
The Blue Jays were 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.
A source told ESPN's Marly Rivera that Maryland offered to allow the Blue Jays to start playing at Camden Yards in September, but the team decided it did not want to wait for that.
Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan acknowledged in an interview with The Associated Press that there had been talks about the state hosting the Blue Jays. It was not immediately clear if the state turned down the Blue Jays amid a spike in COVID-19 cases in Baltimore in recent weeks.
Toronto begins the season at Tampa Bay on Friday. The Blue Jays are scheduled to play their first home game July 29 against the defending champion Washington Nationals.
In a letter, Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York urged Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred to pick Buffalo.
"Since it is Opening Day, there is little time for continued deliberation -- now is the time to act -- and Buffalo is ready to roll out the red carpet and welcome Major League Baseball to Sahlen Field and Western New York," he wrote.
"I strongly urge MLB and the Blue Jays to choose Buffalo as your home for the 2020 season."
Schumer noted the partnership between the Bisons and Blue Jays has been strong since their affiliation began in 2013.
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 had previously said if the Blue Jays couldn't find a major league park, Buffalo would be their most likely site for home games. But it lacks major league-caliber facilities.
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.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.