The Mercury News

Dodgers’ Turner gets stern reprimand

- By Bill Plunkett bplunkett@scng.com

ARLINGTON, TEXAS >> A little over a week ago with the World Series about to begin, Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner praised MLB players for behaving responsibl­y and making it possible for the 2020 season to be played to its conclusion despite the challenges of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“It’s ultimately a testament to the players for being responsibl­e and making good choices and doing everything we had to do to ensure that the season was able to go on,” Turner said then. “I tip my cap to every player who put the uniform on and took that risk of playing and was responsibl­e about it and

enabled us to have a season and now participat­e in the World Series.”

But Turner wound up being the picture of irresponsi­bility when that season ended.

Pulled from the game in the final innings of the Dodgers’ 3-1 win in Game 6 of the World Series when a positive coronaviru­s test was confirmed, Turner nonetheles­s returned to the field for the postgame celebratio­n after the team won its first world title in 32 years. His behavior was admonished by Major League Baseball in a statement released Wednesday afternoon and Turner could be subject to discipline for his actions.

“Immediatel­y upon receiving notice from the laboratory of a positive test, protocols were triggered, leading to the removal of Justin Turner from last night’s game,” the MLB commission­er’s office outlined in a statement released Wednesday afternoon.

“Turner was placed into isolation for the safety of those around him. However, following the Dodgers’ victory, it is clear that Turner chose to disregard the agreed-upon joint protocols and the instructio­ns he was given regarding the safety and protection of others.

“While a desire to celebrate is understand­able,

Turner’s decision to leave isolation and enter the field was wrong and put everyone he came in contact with at risk. When MLB Security raised the matter of being on the field with Turner, he emphatical­ly refused to comply.”

The statement also said the commission­er’s office has begun a “full investigat­ion” into Turner’s behavior and will consult with the players’ union “within the parameters of the joint 2020 Operations Manual.” The Operations Manual set out in over 100 pages the agreement between MLB and the players’ union that outlined the parameters under which the season would be played during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The traveling parties for the Dodgers and Tampa Bay Rays were tested following Game 6 on Tuesday night and again Wednesday morning. Late Wednesday afternoon, both teams’ traveling parties were cleared to return to their home cities. Turner and his wife, Kourtney, were reportedly the only members of the Dodgers’ traveling party not on the flight back to Los Angeles.

Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said he was unaware of Turner’s positive test until the seventh inning of World Series Game 6 and Turner was immediatel­y removed from the game. However, Turner returned to the field for the post-game celebratio­n and could be seen mingling with his teammates, hugging many and posing for photos with the World Series trophy and the entire team.

F r ie dman defended Turner, saying he wore a mask and was “socially distancing” from teammates most of that time. But there are photos clearly showing Turner without a mask — including sitting on the pitcher’s mound next to the trophy flanked by Friedman and Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, both maskless.

“I think the people who were around him would be in the contact tracing web anyway — which is how close a lot of us have been around each other,” Friedman said Tuesday night. “The subsequent tests that we’re going to take are really important to figure out what we’re doing to do to make sure that any of us who are potentiall­y positive do not spread it to other people.”

Turner posted on Twitter on Tuesday night that he is asymptomat­ic. But COVID-19 can spread from asymptomat­ic people.

“I think Justin wanted to come out and take a picture with the trophy and he did,” Friedman said.

“We did (follow protocol). When he came out of the game he went and was quarantine­d in a doctor’s office off to the side. ... We’ve all been in a bubble and so I think the amount of contact and interactio­n between us that have been in that bubble is pretty high. So now it’s important to make sure that the people who are infected are subsequent­ly quarantine­d. I think, by and large, it’s to make sure that we don’t spread it outside of this bubble because from a contact tracing standpoint we’re all kind of in that web.”

Turner is not the only one who was more interested in celebratin­g a championsh­ip than following health and safety recommenda­tions.

L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said fan celebratio­ns during the Lakers and Dodgers championsh­ip runs have contribute­d to the county’s stubbornly high rate of coronaviru­s infections due to all the gatherings.

 ?? SUE OGROCKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Dodgers’ Justin Turner learned he’d tested positive for COVID-19 during Tuesday night’s Game 6.
SUE OGROCKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Dodgers’ Justin Turner learned he’d tested positive for COVID-19 during Tuesday night’s Game 6.
 ?? ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner sits next to manager Dave Roberts after Los Angeles defeated the Tampa Bay Rays in Game 6 on Tuesday night to win the World Series.
ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner sits next to manager Dave Roberts after Los Angeles defeated the Tampa Bay Rays in Game 6 on Tuesday night to win the World Series.

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