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Astros sign stealing suspensions
Wow.
The Red Sox and Alex Cora better be preparing for the next round... |
Alex should get much worse, involved for 2 different teams, and MLB thinks he's the mastermind behind it.
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I found the Astros punishment to be really weak. I mean, 5 million dollar fine? That's like fining me 5 bucks. If they really wanted to end cheating tomorrow, they'd lower the Astros luxury tax threshold by 30 million for the next decade and let them bleed.
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Also I don't understand how a guy who hacks a server in the offseason gets banned for life while a bunch of guys on the field cheating in game to win a World Series get 1 year bans.
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Now, the Astros Have Fired Hinch & GM!!!
Big WOW!!
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Also took first two picks in draft for next two years. Basically a ban on the GM and Hinch too. Who's going to hire them now (They've been fired)
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In explaining why no players were punished the Commish said :
“Assessing discipline of players for this type of conduct is both difficult and impractical. It is difficult, because virtually all of the Astros’ players had some involvement or knowledge of the scheme, and I am not in a position based on the investigative record to determine with any degree of certainty every player who should be held accountable, or their relative degree of culpability. “It is impractical given the large number of players involved, and the fact that many of those players now play for other clubs.” If "virtually all" of the player were involved then their WS championship should be taken away from them. There should not be a champion in 2018. Sorry. I meant 2017 I got my "Dodgers sucked in the WS" years confused. Doug "which isn't to say that the Dodgers deserve it" Goodman |
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I was referring to Correa, but what does criminality have to do with violating the rules of baseball? Pete Rose wasn't banned for violating federal law.
In the most simplistic terms, Correa logged into his old account and looked at scouting reports in the off season. I fail to see how what Correa did was more egregious to the game than what the Astros did. His lifetime ban is meant to deter behavior. |
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If he did, he wouldn't have been suspended for a year, and fired. Doug "but I do" Goodman |
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I find it outrageous, but oh so predictable, that the players involved in this have skated. While I can sympathize with the idea that penalizing their current teams is unfair, that should in no way preclude fining those involved in the most draconian fashion possible. The whole sordid affair just reminds me of how impossibly naive I am to engage on a fan basis with organized sports.
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1) I thought players should have been penalized somehow, perhaps monetarily - like returning the postseason bonus.
2) I still thought this was better than NCAA consequences. I have always thought vacating wins and championships was a stupid idea. One cannot simply make a season disappear. 3) As the NCAA has proven, coaches and leaders who have made poor life choices are always able to be rehired after a period of reflection and a public apology. Especially small schools looking for an edge. Just look at Mike Leach. Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk |
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2 - I completely disagree. It's not making a season disappear, it's making the statement that they did not "win". MLB should take the trophy back, too, if only to make the statement. Doug |
Responding to #2: I think that the real lesson is the sadness that it can't be undone. It stands forever as a stain. It took away a possible career defining moment for Kershaw and Darvish.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk |
In these types of situations, I am a firm believer in taking away the championship, removing it eternally from the records. I think that's the best punishment.
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In general I don't agree with removing titles.
They did that in cycling, and removed all Lance Armstrongs titles. In other cases the win went to the second place finisher. (Also done in other sports) Except... in one of the years the top finisher who could be thought of as totally clean was 23rd or something like that. So there are no winners for seven years. In Team sports it's just silly. One guy gets paid, so everyone "loses" a title, and players years later lose the opportunity to play in bowl games. Sure, punish the people who were outside the rules, but punishing players who didn't cheat, and players years later - Like USC which was punished in 2010 for stuff done in 2004-5. None of the players in 2010 or 2011 were even on the team the coach had even left. |
I'm not one for forfeiting titles either. I think an apt punishment for the players on the Astros postseason rosters would be to take the bonuses back and give them to the players on the teams they cheated to beat.
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To me, this scandal is second only to the 1919 Black Sox. An entire team, over the course of an entire season plus the postseason, conspired to use illegal technology to gain an advantage over their opponents. Regardless of active participation or silent partnership, the entire team made a mockery of the game and the game's integrity. Every team was explicitly warned in September 2017, yet the Astros continued to cheat. That is symptomatic of an organization that has lost its moral and ethical compass, top to bottom.
It's too bad Manfred is loathe to take on the union, and that he apparently thinks the union also lacks a moral and ethical compass. If Manfred had any cojones, he'd get together with Tony Clark and get him to agree suspensions would a major step to rebuilding the integrity of the game within their own player base and the fanbase. It ticks me off to no end that no player will see any punishment from their cheating. Further, the 2017 title should be vacated. Again, Manfred lacks the spine to make it happen, so Astros owner Jim Crane should step up and do the right thing. The Astros are going to get crucified wherever they go in 2020. Fans will be merciless. Can you imagine the good will Crane could build up if he were to vacate his own title? And I do mean vacate. The Dodgers lost in 2017 and 2018 to the eventual "champions", but so did the Yankees. It can never be known who would have prevailed in either season had the Astros and Red Sox not cheated. Two blank years, one now and one after the Boston investigation is over, would set the tone for all time. |
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Yes
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Yes, I agree. |
Now there are claims that Altuve and Bregman were wearing devices that buzzed for certain pitches. That could just be internet nonsense or this thing could get very interesting.
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Interesting layer to the story. While I don't believe you can take away a team championship, individual player awards are a different story. I would have zero problem with Altuve being stripped of his MVP and it being awarded to Judge.
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After the dust settles I want to apologize to Clayton Kershaw....us dodgers fans have always blamed him for losing the 2017 world series...it was unbelievable how dominant he was at home but that game 5 in houston he coughed up a 4-0 then 7-4 lead, and I don't think him or us have really gotten over that.
Im not sure of all the suspensions, but if the cheating goes as deep as buzzers they should be stripped of the title...those pompous asses including hinch and bregman were smug until the end when one of their own ratted them out.... |
I think Hinch will end up managing again. Might not be right, but teams always find ways to justify hiring people who will help them win, and Hinch was apparently an observor who didn't like it, but didn't do anything. In a couple of years a GM will use that as an excuse to hire him.
Also, I think Beltran losing his Mets manager job was actually a reward for him. JK of course. I think losing that job because of his scandal actions as a player, could open the floodgates for more players facing repercussions. The problem with the whole thing is that MLB teams have always cheated as much as they could get away with, so I believe the Astros are the tip of the iceberg, the Red Sox could be the tip of a yet higher iceberg, and after that the icebergs will just keep on melting. Everyone remembers the 2001 story revealing Bobby Thompson getting the sign for the home run pitch sent to him, originating by telescope. That's not much different. |
One more thing to add. As a lifelong Astros fan, my perspective is different. The sports talking heads keep repeating how horrible this is for Dodgers fans, etc. Hey, it's also horrible for Astros fans. It's not like, as fans, we wanted a World Series at all costs. That's on the team, and it's an embarrassment to us fans. I have World Series bunting that hung in the Astros stadium during the World Series games, and I doubt it will ever come out of the drawer now.
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One of the headlines on MLB.com is "Keuchel apologizes for '17 Astros' sign-stealing".
Which is MLB's way of saying "look they're sorry, isn't that punishment enough?" Here are four quotes from his "apology", with my translations : 1 - "...it sucks to the extent of the clubhouse rule that was broken. I mean, that’s where I’ll go with that. I don’t really have much else to say about Mike.” Which means : Mike Friars should have kept our secret, he shouldn't have told his new teammates that his old teammates were going to cheat, fuck that guy. 2 - "When stuff comes out about things that happened during the course of a big league ball season, it’s always blown up to the point of, ‘Oh my gosh, this has never happened before.’ I mean, I’m not going to go into specific details." Which means : It wasn't really that big of a deal, everybody does it. 3 - “But during the course of the playoffs in ’17, everybody was using multiple signs. For factual purposes, when there’s nobody on base, when in the history of Major League Baseball has there been multiple signs? You can go back and watch film of every team in the playoffs. There was probably six out of eight teams using multiple signs. It’s just what the state of baseball was at that point and time" Which means : we had to cheat, 6 of the 8 teams are using multiple signs, how else could we break their codes? 4 - "Was it against the rules? Yes, it was. I personally am sorry for what’s come about, the whole situation. But it is what it is, and we have to move past that. I never thought anything would have come like it did, and I myself am sorry. We have to move on.” Which means : I am sorry that it's come out how we won. But we still have the trophy, and we still have our World Series bonuses, so really it's not that big of a deal. Neener neener neener, we won, hahahaha. Fuck him. According to the commissioner of baseball, "virtually all of the Astros’ players had some involvement or knowledge of the scheme" Here is the list, 25 names to be written next to Shoeless Joe and Eddie Cicotte : Juan Centeno Evan Gattis Brian McCann Jose Altuve Alex Bregman Carlos Correa Marwin Gonzalez Yuli Gurriel Carlos Beltran Derek Fisher Cameron Maybin Josh Reddick George Springer Dallas Keuchel Francisco Liriano Chris Devenski Ken Giles Luke Gregerson Will Harris Lance McCullers, Jr. Collin McHugh Charlie Morton Joe Musgrove Brad Peacock Justin Verlander Fuck all of them. Doug "potty mouth" Goodman |
I was excited when I heard that "a former Astros player" was going to apologize. Even more so when I found out it was Keuchel.
Less so when I listened to his apology. He's just made my very short MLB douchebag list. |
"Marwin Gonzalez was openly remorseful and apologized for his role in the Astros' sign-stealing scandal"
Quickly pushed off the front page of the MLB home page, because they want us to just get over it and move on and be excited about the possibility of 28 teams making the playoffs in the near future. Doug "sarcasm" Goodman |
Who cares they were stealing.
The game has sucked for years now. I can’t bear to watch a single game. |
Former Blue Jays pitcher sues Astros, says sign-stealing cut his career short
https://www.ctvnews.ca/world/former-...hort-1.4806353 |
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I haven't read all of these comments in detail, but I started to wonder how the Astros cheating may have affected bonuses that would have been due, or other salary negotiations for the players on the other teams after they lost in the playoffs or World Series. There must be many players that have monetary incentives tied to their post season performance. This scandal had to have cost multiple players on the losing teams millions in salary. I liked that Mike Trout came out and said the punishment didn't fit the crime and more should be done to punish the players involved.
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I haven't posted in quite a while, life got in the way. So, I'm just now catching up on this thread. I have a question for those (especially Dodger fans) that think the Astros should vacate their title. Don Drysdale (Dodger) admittedly threw spitballs which are banned. Since he cheated too, should the Dodgers vacate their '59, '63 and '65 World Series Titles? If not, what's the difference? How can you condemn one team for cheating, but not another? I guess you could make the argument that Drysdale was only one person where the Astros did it as a team. Well, not really. Not every Astro was involved in the cheating, and Drysdale's teammates had to have known what he was doing. They didn't say anything. My point is that in both scenarios, multiple people had to have known whether they participated or not.
I'd also argue the fact that the cheating really didn't give them an advantage. They did much better on the road (where they're not accused of cheating) than they did at home (where they did cheat). Look at the road stats from 2017 compared to the home stats. HOME: Avg: .279 OBP: .340 Slg: .472 Runs scored: 395 W-L: 48-33 ROAD: Avg: .284 OBP: .351 Slg: .483 Runs scored: 501 W-L: 53-28 And when it was all on the line, game 7 of the World Series, in LA, the Dodgers folded like an accordion 5-1. Were the Astros cheating that game too? :rolleyes: Dodgers had a chance to wrap it up at home in a game 7 and they didn't get the job done. Period. And this really isn't about the Astros, Drysdale or anything else. It's a matter of how people can justify certain cheating scenarios, but condemn others. I truly don't get that. And I'm not trying to justify what the Astros did. Yes, they cheated. Nobody is denying that. I'm not making excuses for it. But here's the difference. I own up to and acknowledge my team's cheating, do you own up to yours? Yes, let's take away the Astros 2017 World Series Title...right after we take away the Dodgers '59, '63 and '65 Titles. |
Throwing a spitball and using your entire clubhouse to cheat are very different scenarios. People want the Astros punished as a team and the players on that team punished for their behavior as a team. If you want to say Drysdale should be punished now for throwing a spitball, that's fair. But what similarities are you trying to draw between one individual player throwing an illegal pitch and an entire team conspiring to use technology to steal signs and it's own players to relay that information to a batter in real time?
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It's not a spin, it's what happened.
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The spin comes when you try to justify cheating based on the number of individuals involved. Once again, cheating is cheating no matter if it's an individual effort or a team effort. The intent of the cheating is still the same - to give your team an advantage. |
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The number of individuals who participate is irrelevant, whether it's one player or an entire team. Cheating is cheating whether is an individual effort or a team effort. You win as a team, you lose as a team. And it's fine if you don't see a difference. We can disagree. |
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In track and field, if one member of running relay team is found to have used steroids, the entire team is disqualified because the steroid-user was an inherent part of the team, it's time and win. Some in the peanut gallery will object and say the other three members of the team should be able to keep their Gold Medal because only one was found to have cheated, but that's now it works. |
It's interesting that nearly everyone thinks of it as a sign stealing infraction, when it's actually allowed to steal signs.
What isn't allowed is doing it with any sort of technology. Not having signs that are hard to figure out and change periodically is like leaving your doors unlocked. Sure, people aren't supposed to come in and take stuff, but why make it easy for them? |
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