Turner initially didn’t join his teammates on the field for the post-game celebrations and tweeted: “Can’t believe I couldn’t be out there to celebrate with my guys!”
However, he did eventually return to the field to celebrate, hugging his teammates, posing for photos with the roster and at times not wearing a mask, which has led to both the 35-year-old third baseman and the Dodgers organization coming in for criticism.
“I don’t think there was anyone that was going to stop him from going out [onto the field],” Andrew Friedman, the Dodgers president of baseball operations, told reporters after the game.
Friedman added that Turner had been careful not to mingle with those he “hadn’t already been in contact with,” but said he didn’t keep an eye on him during the post-game celebrations.
“If there are people around him without masks, that’s not good optics at all,” Friedman said, adding that he was “not sure” if the Dodgers would be able to travel back to Los Angeles from their bubble in Texas.
MLB didn’t immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment when asked if the team would have to remain isolated in Texas and why Turner was allowed to return to the field to celebrate.
Turner is the first MLB player to test positive for Covid-19 since the league put all teams involved in the postseason into bubbles, held at neutral stadiums to reduce travel and the potential to spread the virus.
The Dodgers and Rays have also remained in bubble environments while playing the World Series at the neutral venue of Arlington, Texas.
LA sporting success
MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred told Fox during his post-game interview that it was “a bittersweet night for” the league.
“We’re glad to be done,” he said. “I think it’s a great accomplishment for our players to get the season completed, but obviously we’re concerned when any of our players test positive.
“We learned during the game that Justin was a positive. He was immediately isolated to prevent spread.”
The crowd that had been in attendance to witness the Dodgers’ Game 6 victory booed Manfred during his post-game speech. The jeers got got so loud that the commissioner paused in an attempt to let them die down.
At least 7,000 people have died from the coronavirus in Los Angeles County, public health officials announced Monday.
According to officials, the rise in cases — more than 300,000 people have been infected in the nation’s most populous county — is strongly linked to private and public gatherings for sports events.
In a press conference on Monday, L.A. County Department of Public Health Director Dr. Barbara Ferrer said there have been more people mixing than anticipated as sporting events bring people together across the area.