How a suspended Phillies season may have sparked a new rivalry

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Frustration has been setting in for each and every Phillies fan. They opened their season a week ago. Now, they have to sit around and do nothing, through no fault of their own. The Phillies season is on hold for the time being and it may just spark a new rivalry

For years, the Phillies had a rotating door of NL East rivals. The Braves, Nationals, and, especially, Mets all got under the Phillies’ skins during different periods of time.

From 1995 to 2005, the Atlanta Braves and their fans shoved their powerhouse down our throats. The 2010s saw the rise of “Nattitude”. Do I need to say more about that? The New York Mets just were the Mets and were like a buzzing fly. They’d annoy you, go away, and come back, repeatedly.

Meet the new Mets

If you didn’t know, 2020 has been plagued by…well, a plague. After the Phillies had a minor outbreak while in Florida, they did their best to keep everyone safe. For all intents and purposes, Joe Girardi and Phillies’s leadership seemed to be running a tight and very clean ship.

But, everything changed when the Marlins team arrived.

Going into Sunday’s game against the Phillies, the Marlins knew they had a problem. Three players had tested positive. Soon after, a full-on outbreak occurred. So far, there have been 18 confirmed cases of COVID-19 on the Marlins.

Because the Marlins made a reckless decision, the Phillies aren’t going to be playing a game until at least Monday. More importantly, the Marlins put Phillies’ players and their families’ lives at risk.

So far, no Phillies player has tested positive, but a coach and clubhouse attendant have.

The worst of it all is the Marlins’ outbreak came from an alleged “night on the town” while in Atlanta.

This most likely wasn’t a freak accident, but more so sheer stupidity on the Marlins’ behalf. Let me reiterate. THEY KNEW THEY HAD A PROBLEM AND THE PLAYERS DECIDED “OH, IT’S NO BIG DEAL”.

The Marlins are now public enemy number 1 for the Phillies. If there are no punishments for the Marlins’ manager Don Mattingly or for any of the players if they did go out, the Phillies must start taking it to the Marlins. Forget last years’ 9-10 record against them. Forget the start to this Phillies season.

It’s time to get some good old stone-cold revenge by beat the crap out of the Marlins on the field. Hungry dogs run faster and the Phillies are hungry to play baseball.

Mandatory Credit: James Lang-USA TODAY Sports