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Report: High-risk players can sit out MLB season with pay

Billie Weiss/Boston Red Sox / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Major League Baseball and the players' association agreed Tuesday to health and safety protocols for an abbreviated 60-game season beginning in late July.

One of the provisions agreed upon is that players considered to be high-risk can choose to sit out the season with pay while receiving service time, according to a 101-page operations manual obtained by Ken Rosenthal and Evan Drellich of The Athletic.

The league and union defined high-risk players as those "who, by virtue of their age and/or medical history, are at a materially higher risk of developing severe illness of complications from COVID-19 exposure." Team doctors will review medical histories and identify those within their organization who fit the description as well as those who live with or have regular contact with high-risk people.

Players not considered to be high-risk who are in close contact with higher-risk people can opt to sit out but will not be automatically guaranteed pay or service time. This could be treated on a team-by-team basis.

Non-players who receive a high-risk designation will reportedly also be dealt with on a team-by-team basis as there doesn't appear to be a league-wide policy in place.

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