CLEVELAND — On Friday, the Cleveland Indians announced that they have taken pitchers Mike Clevinger and Zach Plesac off of the Restricted List and transferred them to the club's alternate training site at Lake County.
The move wraps up a wild week for the two Tribe pitchers, who were found to have broken the team's COVID-19 protocol rules last weekend in Chicago.
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Chris Antonetti, Cleveland’s president of baseball operations, said both players drove to Detroit and met with the teammates in an “open forum.” Antonetti, manager Terry Francona and general manager Mike Chernoff then met and decided to option Plesac and Clevinger to the alternate site in Lake County rather than allow them to rejoin the team.
Plesac explained his story during a lengthy post on Instagram Thursday.
"A few days prior to leaving for this trip, the MLB came up with these new protocols that required a curfew and some other things that would keep us more isolated as baseball players and contain us more in like a bubble-type sense," Plesac said. "After my start, I went out to dinner with some buddies. We ended up going back to his place -- the same group that we went to dinner with ... Just hanging out, having a good time. We broke curfew, I came back late and I was reported by MLB security being out in public and coming back late to curfew."
As a result, the Indians sent the 25-year-old Plesac back to Cleveland in a car service before placing him on the restricted list so that he could quarantine and undergo coronavirus testing before rejoining the team. The team later discovered that Indians pitcher Mike Clevinger had also broken protocol before flying back with the team on Sunday night.
The actions of Plesac and Clevinger -- who was also placed on the restricted list -- has drawn criticism from media, fans and teammates, including Indians pitcher Adam Plutko. Plesac, however, stated in his video that there wasn't any malicious intent behind his and Clevinger's decisions.
"I just did a little bit of research and I found out that [CDC guidance is] changing day to day and 10 people or less is considered a safe gathering, especially if you're six-feet apart. And that entire night, dinner and hanging out at my buddy's place after, we were not with more than eight people the entire night," Plesac said. "So the media's portraying me and my best friend and teammate to be malicious with our actions when we were really -- not justifying what we did, because we left the hotel and according to the new rules, we weren't supposed to leave.
"But according to the CDC and these guidelines with [coronavirus], we were practicing safe practices in a small group with people who we know have been tested and came back to our curfew late, which was 10 p.m. and have clearly been exposed as being bad teammates, bad people and dragged across the mud. So it's hard to sit here and watch how things shuffle out and people not knowing the truth."