Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Softball
+1. Not as active as many other sports, but great team sport and you spend very little time near anyone else.
+2. Rec softball. Naturally socially distanced, and not too late to start at the rec level.
Just in the dugout, sharing bats and helmets and balls. All safe here. Clueless. Nothing is safe. Take the risk or don’t.
No- kids do not share bats and helmets (or any other equipment). Dugouts are not being used. Bags are lined up 6ft apart along the fence and the batting team stands by their respective bags. No high fives or anything like that. I’m totally comfortable with it- nothing is “no risk”- but this is very low risk IMO. They are outdoors and softball is naturally a socially distanced sport.
At the games I’ve been to this summer, the kids are all sitting maskless together in the stands before the game. So are the parents. YMMV.
You're lying. You know how I know you're lying? Kids don't use the stands in softball in normal times. No one sits in the stands except maybe one or two parents who forgot their camp chairs.
Softball spectators tend to sit in camp chairs behind the backstop or along the infield fence. They're just spreading out.
Girls don't sit together in the stands. Before COVID they might congregate in the dugout. But that doesn't happen now.
And if you were at games this summer, you're watching travel, which is taking this very seriously. There are no rec leagues operating at the moment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Softball
+1. Not as active as many other sports, but great team sport and you spend very little time near anyone else.
+2. Rec softball. Naturally socially distanced, and not too late to start at the rec level.
Just in the dugout, sharing bats and helmets and balls. All safe here. Clueless. Nothing is safe. Take the risk or don’t.
No- kids do not share bats and helmets (or any other equipment). Dugouts are not being used. Bags are lined up 6ft apart along the fence and the batting team stands by their respective bags. No high fives or anything like that. I’m totally comfortable with it- nothing is “no risk”- but this is very low risk IMO. They are outdoors and softball is naturally a socially distanced sport.
At the games I’ve been to this summer, the kids are all sitting maskless together in the stands before the game. So are the parents. YMMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Softball
+1. Not as active as many other sports, but great team sport and you spend very little time near anyone else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Softball
+1. Not as active as many other sports, but great team sport and you spend very little time near anyone else.
+2. Rec softball. Naturally socially distanced, and not too late to start at the rec level.
Just in the dugout, sharing bats and helmets and balls. All safe here. Clueless. Nothing is safe. Take the risk or don’t.
No- kids do not share bats and helmets (or any other equipment). Dugouts are not being used. Bags are lined up 6ft apart along the fence and the batting team stands by their respective bags. No high fives or anything like that. I’m totally comfortable with it- nothing is “no risk”- but this is very low risk IMO. They are outdoors and softball is naturally a socially distanced sport.
Why are all these professional MLB players and coaches getting covid, then?
Seriously? They spend massively more time together (travel together, meals, clubhouse/locker room etc) than a kid softball team. It’s a career for them. They likely aren’t contracting it while actually playing- outdoors- but in those other areas.
Depends entirely on the team and level of play. Have you seen those travel softball parents and their setups? Tents, snack tables, chairs, everyone congregating and hanging out? That's not a judgment but it IS what happens. There is often not a ton of room at the fields, also, for spectating. Unless you want to be out in one of the field areas (and that's not doable for all fields).
And then, of course, this is all dependent on people upholding their own responsibilities off field (being safe) AND not sending their kid to practice/games if they've been exposed or are sick. But, since people already do that at school and other places, we know that will not be the case.
So is softball safer? Maybe. But, I think there the differences in major leagues -that have more money and ability to make the players safe- that you are understating here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Softball
+1. Not as active as many other sports, but great team sport and you spend very little time near anyone else.
+2. Rec softball. Naturally socially distanced, and not too late to start at the rec level.
Just in the dugout, sharing bats and helmets and balls. All safe here. Clueless. Nothing is safe. Take the risk or don’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Softball
+1. Not as active as many other sports, but great team sport and you spend very little time near anyone else.
+2. Rec softball. Naturally socially distanced, and not too late to start at the rec level.
Just in the dugout, sharing bats and helmets and balls. All safe here. Clueless. Nothing is safe. Take the risk or don’t.
No- kids do not share bats and helmets (or any other equipment). Dugouts are not being used. Bags are lined up 6ft apart along the fence and the batting team stands by their respective bags. No high fives or anything like that. I’m totally comfortable with it- nothing is “no risk”- but this is very low risk IMO. They are outdoors and softball is naturally a socially distanced sport.
Why are all these professional MLB players and coaches getting covid, then?
Seriously? They spend massively more time together (travel together, meals, clubhouse/locker room etc) than a kid softball team. It’s a career for them. They likely aren’t contracting it while actually playing- outdoors- but in those other areas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Softball
+1. Not as active as many other sports, but great team sport and you spend very little time near anyone else.
+2. Rec softball. Naturally socially distanced, and not too late to start at the rec level.
Just in the dugout, sharing bats and helmets and balls. All safe here. Clueless. Nothing is safe. Take the risk or don’t.
No- kids do not share bats and helmets (or any other equipment). Dugouts are not being used. Bags are lined up 6ft apart along the fence and the batting team stands by their respective bags. No high fives or anything like that. I’m totally comfortable with it- nothing is “no risk”- but this is very low risk IMO. They are outdoors and softball is naturally a socially distanced sport.
Why are all these professional MLB players and coaches getting covid, then?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Softball
+1. Not as active as many other sports, but great team sport and you spend very little time near anyone else.
+2. Rec softball. Naturally socially distanced, and not too late to start at the rec level.
Just in the dugout, sharing bats and helmets and balls. All safe here. Clueless. Nothing is safe. Take the risk or don’t.
No- kids do not share bats and helmets (or any other equipment). Dugouts are not being used. Bags are lined up 6ft apart along the fence and the batting team stands by their respective bags. No high fives or anything like that. I’m totally comfortable with it- nothing is “no risk”- but this is very low risk IMO. They are outdoors and softball is naturally a socially distanced sport.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Softball
+1. Not as active as many other sports, but great team sport and you spend very little time near anyone else.
+2. Rec softball. Naturally socially distanced, and not too late to start at the rec level.
Just in the dugout, sharing bats and helmets and balls. All safe here. Clueless. Nothing is safe. Take the risk or don’t.
No- kids do not share bats and helmets (or any other equipment). Dugouts are not being used. Bags are lined up 6ft apart along the fence and the batting team stands by their respective bags. No high fives or anything like that. I’m totally comfortable with it- nothing is “no risk”- but this is very low risk IMO. They are outdoors and softball is naturally a socially distanced sport.
At the games I’ve been to this summer, the kids are all sitting maskless together in the stands before the game. So are the parents. YMMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Softball
+1. Not as active as many other sports, but great team sport and you spend very little time near anyone else.
+2. Rec softball. Naturally socially distanced, and not too late to start at the rec level.
Just in the dugout, sharing bats and helmets and balls. All safe here. Clueless. Nothing is safe. Take the risk or don’t.
No- kids do not share bats and helmets (or any other equipment). Dugouts are not being used. Bags are lined up 6ft apart along the fence and the batting team stands by their respective bags. No high fives or anything like that. I’m totally comfortable with it- nothing is “no risk”- but this is very low risk IMO. They are outdoors and softball is naturally a socially distanced sport.