All-star outfielder Charlie Blackmon, 2 other Rockies have coronavirus: report
Players on several other teams said to have tested positive ahead of season opener
All-star outfielder Charlie Blackmon of the Colorado Rockies has become the first Major League Baseball player known to have tested positive for the coronavirus.
A person familiar with Blackmon's situation confirmed the test result to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because there was no official announcement.
The Denver Post first reported Blackmon's condition, saying Tuesday three Rockies players had tested positive.
Blackmon is a four-time all-star slugger who hit .314 with 32 home runs and 86 runs batted in last season. He turns 34 on July 1, the day players are set to begin reporting for the resumption of spring training.
Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred imposed a 60-game season Tuesday night after failed financial negotiations between owners and players. The season that's been delayed by the pandemic will begin either July 23 or 24.
Numerous teams have said they have players who have tested positive for the virus without identifying any of them. The Philadelphia Phillies have announced seven, while the Detroit Tigers said one player who was living in Florida but not working out at the team's spring training facilities in Lakeland also tested positive.
Seattle Mariners general manager Jerry Dipoto said a few players have tested positive but declined to specify the number or whether they are part of Seattle's 40-man roster. And several Toronto Blue Jays players and staff members have tested positive, according to a person who confirmed the test results to the AP on condition of anonymity because there was no official announcement but did not specify a number. The Blue Jays closed their training facility last week in Dunedin, Florida, after a player showed symptoms consistent with the virus.
The Post reported Blackmon tested positive last week after workouts at Coors Field in Denver. The newspaper said the Rockies then closed the ballpark, following MLB protocol.
Many players around the majors have been working in recent weeks at either their home ballparks or their team's complexes in Florida or Arizona. MLB closed all spring camp sites last Friday because of virus concerns.
Blackmon is a career .304 hitter in nine years.