Friday Insider: Pirates' Kelly confident in Spring II taken on the North Shore (Courtesy of Point Park University)

PNC Park's boat entrance, Mazeroski Way. - DEJAN KOVACEVIC / DKPS

Nearly two months removed from the start of the coronavirus shutdown, there is still no official proposed start date for Major League Baseball. That may change in the near future, though, as the league is expected to submit its first proposal to the Players Association about restarting spring training and getting the season underway.

The Pirates' coaching staff did not wait to outline their own plan for how the second spring training will be run, though they still don't know what it will look like.

“We have started to toss ideas around of how we would function in different places, how we would stagger workouts and get our pitchers and position players in," Derek Shelton said this week.

Players and workouts may need to be staggered if Pennsylvania's restriction of public gatherings of more than 25 people is not lifted, but logistical issues could also make staggering necessary.

It's still unclear where this second spring training will take place. One plan MLB has considered has the players spending the entire season in an Arizona biosphere, and another has them returning to Bradenton. The most recent proposal has them returning to PNC Park for spring training. The facilities are limited here compared to Bradenton. PNC Park has two indoor batting cages, five pitching mounds and, quite literally, one field. Bradenton has 5.5 fields at the players’ disposal, and far more mounds and cages, too.

If there is staggering, position players and pitchers will be mixed, and those groupings can change as camp progresses. If that happens, pitching and hitting coaches would also need to be split up to be with each grouping.

Shelton has emphasized to his staff that they are not going to speculate which proposal MLB will choose, but they have to be prepared for any scenario, just in case. That doesn't make the preparation any easier, though.

“It makes it difficult not knowing the specifics as far as the number of players, staff and where it’s going to be, when it’s going to start," bench coach Don Kelly told me yesterday over the phone.

Kelly ran spring training at Pirate City, the same way Shelton did in Fort Myers for the Twins when he was their bench coach from 2018-2019. Shelton and the players spoke highly of how Kelly ran camp in February, but this is an unprecedented situation.

Originally, spring training was supposed to be about six weeks, from the first workout to the end of spring games. It looks like the second camp will be three weeks, or only half as long.

The staff has also spent more time together in Bradenton than Pittsburgh. The Pirates are returning just three coaches from 2019: Hitting coach Rick Eckstein, bullpen coach Justin Meccage and third base coach Joey Cora. The six new members of the staff -- including Shelton and Kelly -- have only been to PNC Park as visitors.

If the second spring training was to be held in Arizona instead, most of the players will be in a new situation, but coaches like Glenn Sherlock, who spent 19 years as a Diamondbacks coach, and Oscar Marin, who had been an instructor with the Mariners and Rangers, would be more familiar with the facilities. However, with 30 teams converging and only 11 fields at their disposal, that would create more scheduling problems.

To compensate for these potential changes, Shelton joked that he has been sending Kelly 80 texts a day so they can be prepared.

“I think it keeps us both sane," Shelton said.

Ok, but 80?

"It’s not that many, but it’s a lot," Kelly said, laughing. "We’ve been staying in touch constantly throughout the days and weeks as things have evolved.”

That much communication is almost a necessity at this point though as they try to prepare for when camp will resume, and where. Emphasis on where.

“Everything is possible. Really, we have no idea where it’s gonna be," Kelly said.

So if it's at PNC Park, could the coaching staff pull it off?

“There’s no doubt that it’s doable,” Kelly responded.

MORE PIRATES

The Starling Marte trade keeps looking better the longer the shutdown goes. While nobody could have foreseen this delay when the trade happened, 2020 will still count as a full season for him, whether or not a game is played. The Pirates would have received a much smaller return had they waited to trade him until midseason or next offseason, and the shutdown would only make his market worse since fewer games will be played in 2020. On the flip side, if Chris Archer returns to form and the Pirates try to trade him this winter, he might be in higher demand since he is due just $11 million in 2020. Teams may be more budget conscious so they can recoup some of their 2020 losses, and Archer could be a good arm on a team-friendly contract. -- Stumpf

• Talk has picked up this week about starting the regular season in early July. If the same applies for minor-league baseball, teams will have to decide if it is worth playing an eight week season, extending the campaign through September -- thus shortening the offseason for their youngest players -- or just cancelling the season. The third option, cancel the season, seems the most likely, especially since there is no guarantee they could even get started in early July. Minor league spring training was not as far along as MLB spring training was before the shutdown, so they might not be able to get ready in just three weeks like the big leaguers theoretically could. -- Stumpf



PENGUINS

Nikita Pavlychev, who just closed out his collegiate career at Penn State, is one of the most intriguing prospects on the Penguins' organizational depth chart, in large part because he is 6-foot-7, 225 pounds. But precisely where Pavlychev, who was their seventh-round draft choice in 2015, fits into their long-range plans -- or whether he even does -- isn't clear. For while the Penguins are trying to work out a contract with Pavlychev, it would cover him playing in the American Hockey League, with no provision for him being in the NHL. "That's what we're trying to work through with this right now," Jim Rutherford said. "Get him in the American League for a year and then go from there." If Pavlychev would accept such a deal, he would be reunited with former Nittany Lions teammate Chase Berger in Wilkes-Barre but would not be eligible for a promotion to the NHL unless he signed a new contract to play there. What happens if another team offers a player working on an AHL contract an NHL deal isn't clear, perhaps because it isn't a common occurrence. One executive with another club said the player cannot accept the new proposal unless there is an "out" clause in his AHL agreement, but a top official from a third team said that it's "generally understood" that a player in that situation will be released from his minor-league obligation unless his original team wants to upgrade the contract to an NHL deal. -- Dave Molinari

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