The Arizona Republic

MLB ends season with black eye

- Gabe Lacques

They came so close.

For 58 days, Major League Baseball avoided a positive coronaviru­s test among its hundreds of players. As the playoffs unfolded, the player pool shrank and its teams were shuffled into luxe isolation, the protocols and the logistics and the myriad sacrifices that went into staging this unpreceden­ted season built a kind of momentum that made the whole operation seem invulnerab­le. And so it was – almost to the last out. What could have been a well-earned coda to an emotionall­y wrenching season for MLB and its 2020 champions, the Los Angeles Dodgers, instead ended with a pair of gut punches – one of them self-inflicted.

Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner’s positive test for the coronaviru­s, resulting in his abrupt removal from Game 6 of the World Series after seven innings, was a stunning developmen­t, given the relative isolation the players and their families have been in for most of the past month.

Since the first week of October, the Dodgers have hardly budged from their 4,000-acre, suburban Dallas luxury accommodat­ions, speaking glowingly of well-rounded continenta­l breakfasts, team-bonding moments, even Clayton Kershaw enjoying the surreal wake-up call of rotation mate Walker Buehler chipping golf balls outside his door.

And still a key subtext of this season – can MLB, with its billions of dollars in resources and access to bottomless and rapidly processed COVID-19 tests, keep its players safe from the virus? – suffered an unsettling blow at the 11th hour.

It’s hard to imagine how Turner – who turned up with one inconclusi­ve and one positive test in 24 hours – contracted the virus while quarantine­d with his wife and teammates in a highly secured environmen­t. Hopefully, we will find out, because nine months into this pandemic, we are still learning about this virus.

If there was some greater good to MLB consuming more than 100,000 tests to get through 60 games and a postseason, it’s that we could go to school on what worked and did not work as it shuttled its teams through a far less controlled environmen­t than the NBA’s unsullied slice of heaven in Orlando.

Transparen­cy is key. And that also includes a bit greater clarity on how and why Turner was allowed to leave a designated isolation room at Globe Life Field and join his teammates for the championsh­ip-clinching postgame celebratio­n after his positive test was revealed.

A handful of teammates and club president Andrew Friedman offered myriad and largely lame explanatio­ns for a jarring visual –Turner, sometimes masked, sometimes not, mugging for the team photo and hugging teammates.

Friedman leaned on the fact that Turner was largely surrounded by teammates with whom he was quarantini­ng or had been in contact with. The team will have multiple rounds of testing before leaving Texas.

Yet, an on-field post-championsh­ip celebratio­n is not a bubble. There are photograph­ers and camera crews and league officials, not all of them locked down with the Dodgers. The threat of infecting a teammate or teammate’s family member was real.

What’s more, there are millions of people watching on television, all having just learned of Turner’s positive test, only to see him mingling and mugging. For the millions who have been locked down, distanced, unable to access testing or see loved ones, it was a galling image.

Hey, the circumstan­ces are terrible, especially for a franchise pillar. It’s

heartbreak­ing to ponder Turner stuck in isolation while his teammates celebrate the greatest profession­al achievemen­t of their lives.

But the more than 226,000 Americans killed by this virus, the many more with permanent damage and the psychologi­cal and economic ramificati­ons of COVID-19 are far worse. This is a pandemic, not the last day of school, certainly not the time for adults to look the other way while the kids flout a few rules.

It’s not like stars have never been deprived of a championsh­ip celebratio­n. Cincinnati Reds great Eric Davis was hospitaliz­ed with a lacerated kidney suffered in the early innings Game 4 of the 1990 World Series. His championsh­ip ring is just as shiny.

It is weird to consider the season finally over – a year that began with an industry shutdown, followed by a labor fight, followed by dozens of positive COVID-19 tests during summer intake, and the devastatin­g outbreaks suffered by the Miami Marlins and St. Louis Cardinals that threatened the season before it fully got off the ground.

Significan­t mistakes were made. There were times it seemed commission­er Rob Manfred – who said he’s “not a quitter” when the Cardinals’ season teetered – would plow through to the finish regardless of decimated teams or the magnitude of the virus in the 27 markets that allowed MLB to play.

 ?? TIM HEITMAN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner celebrates Tuesday after Los Angeles beat the Rays to win the World Series.
TIM HEITMAN/USA TODAY SPORTS Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner celebrates Tuesday after Los Angeles beat the Rays to win the World Series.

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