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Astros manager, GM banned, sacked over MLB cheating scandal

- AFP

HOUSTON Astros manager A.J. Hinch and team boss Jeff Luhnow have been banned for the 2020 season and sacked by the club after a Major League Baseball investigat­ion into allegation­s of cheating during the 2017 World Series-winning campaign.

In sanctions that sent shockwaves through baseball, MLB commission­er Rob Manfred said the Astros had effectivel­y ignored a warning against illegal sign-stealing issued in September 2017.

“The conduct of the Astros, and its senior baseball operations executives, merits significan­t discipline,” Manfred said in a nine-page ruling.

The conduct had “caused fans, players, executives at other MLB clubs, and members of the media to raise questions about the integrity of games in which the Astros participat­ed.

“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.”

Soon after the suspension­s were announced, Astros owner Jim Crane said Hinch and Luhnow had been sacked.

“I have higher standards for the city and the franchise, and I am going above and beyond the MLB’s penalty,” Crane told a press conference.

“Today I have made the decision to dismiss A.J. Hinch and Jeff Luhnow.

“We need to move forward with a clean slate. We will not have this happen again on my watch.”

In addition to the suspension­s, the Astros have been fined the maximum $5 million allowed under MLB rules.

The team had also forfeited its first and second-round picks in the 2020 and 2021 drafts, the league said.

The penalties are among the stiffest handed out to a team by the MLB.

The Astros — who defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers in seven games to win the 2017 World Series — had been under investigat­ion since November after former pitcher Mike Fiers lifted the lid on tactics used to illegally steal signs from opposing teams.

Sign-stealing in baseball is the act of observing signals by opposing teams, most commonly between pitchers and catchers, in an attempt to gain a tactical advantage by identifyin­g what kind of pitch is likely to be thrown.

Major League Baseball forbids teams using electronic assistance — such as a camera — to help steal signs. Signsteali­ng by players in the field is allowed but generally frowned on.

Fiers told The Athletic the Astros had decoded signs with the assistance of a camera positioned in the outfield.

The team had access to a video feed from the outfield relayed to a television monitor positioned near the home dugout to decipher signals.

 ??  ?? Houston Astros manager A.J. Hinch
Houston Astros manager A.J. Hinch

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