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October 30, 2019 Patcnews ~ The Patriot Conservative News Tea Party Network reported this story news On Major League Baseball WORLD SERIES Scandal...
The Corrupt Socialist Communist Phony Liberal Fake News Media Only Reported This Story After We Called 20 Major News Stations
Across America. Only Months After the Fact now it's 2020.
Astros Manager and G.M. Fired Over Cheating Scandal
General
Manager Jeff Luhnow and Manager A.J. Hinch transformed the team from a
perennial loser to a champion, but a cheating scheme that began in 2017
cost them their jobs.
It
is an enduring part of baseball strategy: As a batter is at the plate,
his teammates carefully watch a catcher’s fingers to figure out what
pitch is about to be thrown.
And it’s
all fair play as long as teams do not enhance the abilities of the
naked eye and clever minds with either cameras or electronic devices
that allow teammates to signal the batter whether a fastball or a
breaking ball is on the way.
But that
is exactly what the Houston Astros did during their 2017
championship-winning season, clouding that World Series title and
causing one of baseball’s biggest cheating scandals in years, Major
League Baseball officials said on Monday in a scathing report detailing
the team’s scheme.
By the end of the
day, Houston General Manager Jeff Luhnow and Manager A.J. Hinch — the
two men who helped propel the Astros to the top of the sport — had been
suspended and then fired, while their club was left with severe
penalties for deploying a scheme involving cameras and monitors to
decode the hand signals of catchers and tip off Houston batters. One of
their favorite communication methods was banging on a trash can just
outside the dugout.
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[A look at sign stealing and what we know about the Houston Astros’ scandal]
Commissioner
Robert D. Manfred of Major League Baseball said in the report, which
was written in a first person voice, that the league could not determine
whether the Astros had changed the results of any games by cheating.
But, he said, “the perception of some that it did causes significant
harm to the game.”
And so M.L.B. acted, issuing one of the heaviest punishments in the history of the sport.
Mr.
Manfred’s report, which concluded an investigation that involved at
least 68 interviews and thousands of videos and documents, excoriated
the Astros’ baseball operations department — including how they treated
employees, other clubs and the news media — as “very problematic.”
[Exploiting technology helped the Astros rise, but also did them in, Tyler Kepner writes]
The
punishments drew mixed reactions from around the baseball world. Many
sympathized with the Los Angeles Dodgers, who lost the 2017 World Series
to the Astros (led by Mr. Hinch) and the Boston Red Sox (led by the
former Astros bench coach Alex Cora) in 2018.
“Didn’t
really expect the punishments to be this harsh. Good for M.L.B.
stepping up,” David Freese, who played on the 2018 Dodgers team, wrote in a tweet.
The
commissioner also noted in his report an incident during the 2019
postseason in which the Astros’ assistant general manager, Brandon Taubman, loudly celebrated a pitcher
who had been suspended from the game for a violation of the M.L.B.
domestic violence policy. A group of female reporters were nearby in the
team’s clubhouse when Mr. Taubman lauded the pitcher.
Credit...David J. Phillip/Associated Press
Jim
Crane, the Astros’ owner and chairman, was largely spared in the
report. And at a news conference announcing the firings soon after
M.L.B. released its report, he said: “We will not have this happen again
on my watch. We need to move forward with a clean slate.”
The
Astros were accused of violating the rules during the 2017 and 2018
seasons, the first of which was when they won their first World Series
title and were praised as a paradigm-shifting power in the baseball
landscape. The team’s heavy focus on analytics earned the nickname
“Astroball,” and Mr. Luhnow’s strategies helped transform the team from a
perennial loser to a championship-winning club.
The
dismissal of Mr. Luhnow and Mr. Hinch came shortly after M.L.B. said
that they would be suspended for the 2020 season and that the club would
be fined $5 million, the maximum penalty allowed under league rules,
while also losing first- and second-round draft picks in 2020 and 2021.
“Neither
one of them started this, but neither one of them did anything about
it,” Mr. Crane said of Mr. Luhnow and Mr. Hinch, who were both once
acclaimed as progressive strategists in a staid sport but now find
themselves barred from the game until the end of the 2020 World Series.
Mr.
Luhnow, who joined the Astros in 2011 after a stint with the St. Louis
Cardinals and a career as an engineer and management consultant that
included five years at the consulting firm McKinsey and Company, issued a
written statement on Monday apologizing for the “shame and
embarrassment this has caused.” He added: “I did not know rules were
being broken.”
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Mr.
Hinch, who was hired by the Astros after the 2014 season, did the same
on Monday: “While the evidence consistently showed I didn’t endorse or
participate in the sign stealing practices, I failed to stop them and I
am deeply sorry.”
Despite the heavy
punishment and damning details of the Astros’ scheme, their title will
not be vacated, though the scandal could have further repercussions as
Mr. Cora, the Red Sox manager, was heavily implicated for his role while
he was a bench coach for the Astros in 2017.
“While
it is impossible to determine whether the conduct actually impacted the
results on the field, the perception of some that it did causes
significant harm to the game,” Mr. Manfred wrote.
The explosion of technology in the sport and M.L.B.’s expansion of replay review in 2014 have added a new dynamic to the sign-stealing practice,
allowing some teams to consistently stay one step ahead of the rule. In
September 2017, all teams were put on notice by M.L.B. after it found
that the Red Sox had been sending information about opposing teams’
signs from their replay review room to people in the dugout wearing
Apple watches. The Red Sox were fined — as were the Yankees, who turned
in their rival, for a lesser misuse of the dugout phone — and Mr.
Manfred sent a memo to teams detailing the potential punishment for
managers and general managers for future violations of the rules
governing the use of electronic equipment.
But
the Astros brazenly continued their practice, Mr. Manfred’s report
said. M.L.B.’s investigation found that the Astros violated those rules
through the 2017 playoffs and for at least part of the 2018 season.
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