PHOENIX — The Rockies will probably know the fate of shortstop Jose Reyes in “the near future,” but that doesn’t mean he will report to spring training with the rest of the club’s position players Wednesday.

General manager Jeff Bridich said Monday that any decision regarding possible discipline or suspension for Reyes under Major League Baseball’s new domestic violence policy remains in the hands of the commissioner’s office.

“The whole thing, soup to nuts, the whole thing, is held underneath this policy,” Bridich said. “That’s why I am saying that any communication or contact to this point (with Reyes) has been limited, because we are beholden to this policy, which is all-encompassing.”

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Asked whether Reyes would be allowed to practice with the Rockies should he show up to camp before the issue is resolved by MLB, Bridich said: “For us right now, it’s kind of a hypothetical. It’s tough to say. If he showed up, I don’t think we would be kicking him out or anything like that. But I think all parties involved in this are anticipating a decision here in the near future.”

Reyes is alleged to have assaulted his wife on Halloween in a Hawaii hotel and is scheduled to go on trial April 4, the same day as the Rockies’ regular-season opener. Reyes, who came to Colorado last July as part of the Troy Tulowitzki trade with the Toronto Blue Jays, is scheduled to make $22 million this season, making him the highest-paid player on the team.

Earlier on Monday, commissioner Rob Manfred said he had made “additional progress” toward decisions on two of the first three cases under the domestic violence policy, adding that he expects an announcement in the next couple of days. He did not reveal which of the three cases are close to resolution. In addition to Reyes, MLB is investigating New York Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman and Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Yasiel Puig.

“The substance of this policy uses a ‘just cause’ standard and also creates kind of a clean slate,” Manfred said. “I am giving really thorough consideration to the cases that I have in front of me and thinking their relevance obviously to the individual players, the individual facts most important, but also with an eye toward starting something new. It’s important to try to get these as right as possible.”

CarGo trade talk. Bridich dismissed the trade rumors that enveloped right fielder Carlos Gonzalez during the offseason.

“Nobody in the organization has ever said we wanted to trade Carlos Gonzalez,” Bridich said. “It has always been supposition and conjecture and assumptions made.

“But we have never said that we wanted to trade him. A year ago at this time it was, ‘Is he going to heal? Has he healed? Is he going to be back to the player that he can be, as a 29-year-old, elite type of player?’ And he answered those questions.”

Gonzalez, coming off knee surgery in August 2014, struggled in spring 2015 but came on strong and finished with a career-high 40 home runs.

“He’s been a great Rockie, so there is still not some overarching desire to trade Carlos Gonzalez,” Bridich said. “But you know the flip side. My job, and the rest of the organization’s job, is to look at every side out there. We have done that. We will continue to do that.

“But I think that if we had some huge, yearning desire to trade Carlos and have him not be a Rockie anymore, it would probably already be done.”