As Major League Baseball gets ready to re-start Spring Training in anticipation of playing a truncated regular season, the league determined visiting team broadcast crews will not be making road trips.

Cory Provus, Dan Gladden, Dick Bremer and the rest of the team’s television and radio teams will be calling at least the regular season road games from the comforts of Target Field, spokesman Dustin Morse confirmed Monday, after reports surfaced in the Star Tribune over the weekend indicating so.

Major League Baseball and the Major League Baseball Players Association announced last week plans for a late-July opening to a 60-game season focused on regional competition. That means the Twins will play division rivals in the American League Central and opponents from the National League Central. Expectations for the team are high. It’s not clear at this point, Morse says, whether their broadcasters would travel if the Twins make the playoffs.

“Time will tell,” he says. “MLB is setting rules as we speak.”

For Major League Soccer’s Minnesota United, its announcers’ the futures are uncertain. The team has shipped off to Orlando for the “MLS Is Back” tournament, which will run through the month of July and into early August. Those games will air with national broadcasters, so the team’s local talent did not travel, says spokesman Eric Durkee.

After that tournament ends, the league hopes to play a to-be-determined number of games to finish the regular season. “There’s no firm dates or amount of games for the restart just yet,” he says, adding that, adding that whether the team’s announcers will travel when those games do start up is also up in the air.

The WNBA’s Minnesota Lynx also does not plan to send broadcasters from Fox Sports North to its games this season, which will be played at the IMG Academy in Bradenton, FL. “But they will cover [the team] appropriately from Minneapolis,” says spokeswoman Bri Bauer.

Aaron Sickman, spokesman for the Minnesota Wild, says the NHL has not yet finalized plans related to how its playoff schedule will be broadcast. Spokesmen for the Vikings and Gophers football teams also say they aren’t sure if their local broadcast teams will travel, should the 2020 season take place.

The voice of the St. Paul Saints, Sean Aronson, however, is getting ready to make his way to Sioux Falls, S.D., where the team will play 42 of its 60 game American Association schedule. Aronson says the small traveling party of about 30 people, the team’s and his own personal precautions and his being relatively separated from the players leave him unconcerned.

His own nasal swab test came back negative. The league is providing quick fingerprint tests and anyone who tests positive, he adds, is required to take the nasal swab test.

“I’ll have my own room, I’m driving up to Sioux Falls on my own,” he says. “All the guys are driving up to Sioux Falls. We will bus to the other hubs, but I plan on driving to Fargo (probably will take the buss to Chicago Milwaukee). We are all required to wear masks on the bus. I’ll wear a mask everywhere except on the broadcast. I’ll take every possible precaution I can.”

Six of 12 American Association teams decided to take the season off. They’ll restart in 2021. The six remaining teams have been organized into three separate hubs. The Saints are paired with the Sioux Falls Canaries at Sioux Falls Stadium. The Winnipeg Goldeyes and Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks will play in Fargo at Newman Outdoor Field. And the Chicago Dogs and Milwaukee Milkmen are at Ballpark Commons in Milwaukee. Games will start July 3 and run through September 10.