Skip to content
Cleveland Indians starting pitcher Zach Plesac throws against the Chicago White Sox during the first inning Aug. 8, 2020, at Guaranteed Rate Field.
Nam Y. Huh/AP
Cleveland Indians starting pitcher Zach Plesac throws against the Chicago White Sox during the first inning Aug. 8, 2020, at Guaranteed Rate Field.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

Indians pitcher Zach Plesac was sent back to Cleveland on Sunday in a rental car after violating team rules and Major League Baseball’s coronavirus protocols, a team official told the Associated Press.

The official said the 25-year-old Plesac, who is from Crown Point, Ind., went out with friends in Chicago on Saturday night after his win against the White Sox. The person, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation, said the team got Plesac a car so he wouldn’t be around teammates in the event he contracted the virus.

It is not known if Plesac has been tested since breaking the team’s code of conduct. He will be isolated from the team and cannot take part in team activities until he twice tests negative for COVID-19.

The Athletic first reported Plesac was sent home.

Indians President Chris Antonetti is expected to address Plesac’s situation after the team’s game in Chicago on Sunday night.

Major League Baseball has been emphasizing the need for players to be more careful and follow its protocols in the wake of coronavirus outbreaks with the Miami Marlins and St. Louis Cardinals. The episode with Plesac, the nephew of former big-league reliever Dan Plesac, is the most high-profile evidence of baseball’s increasing concern about its guidelines.

Last month, Plesac, who has become a reliable starter for the Indians, spoke of the importance of players abiding to the “code of conduct” that every team was required to submit to MLB in hopes of the 60-game season taking place.

“Definitely any time you can maintain social distancing is going to be what we have to focus on,” Plesac said July 3. “There are common-sense situations, where you see things are packed, or going out to the bars and drinking — doing stuff like that isn’t stuff that’s really important to us right now and shouldn’t be important to us right now.

“We’re given this privilege to be able to come back and play and given this short window to even play. It’s a good time now just to really buckle down and focus on what’s important and work toward something greater at the end of the season and for these couple months, lock in and focus on what we have set for us at the end of the year.”

Plesac didn’t allow a run and limited the White Sox to five hits in six innings Saturday to improve to 1-1.