National Post (National Edition)

Red Sox used Apple Watch to steal Yanks’ signs, report says

Electronic, optical devices are illegal

- The Associated Press

NEW YORK • The first-place Boston Red Sox have reportedly admitted to Major League Baseball that they improperly used electronic devices to steal signs from longtime rival New York Yankees.

The New York Times reported Tuesday the Red Sox used a high-tech watch to relay signs by the Yankees catchers during a series last month at Fenway Park.

The newspaper said the Red Sox told MLB investigat­ors that Boston manager John Farrell, general manager Dave Dombrowski and other team executives were not aware of the scheme.

Commission­er Rob Manfred, who was at Fenway Park on Tuesday night as part of a previously planned visit, said he wanted to get the matter resolved quickly. He didn’t comment about possible penalties.

“The only thing that I can tell you about repercussi­ons is that to the extent that there was a violation on either side — and I’m not saying that there was — to the extent that there was a violation on either side, we are 100 per cent comfortabl­e that it is not an ongoing issue — that if it happened, it is no longer happening,” he said.

Farrell said he knew the rule. “Electronic devices are not to be used in the dugout,” he said before Boston hosted the Toronto Blue Jays. “But beyond that, the only thing I can say (is) it’s a league matter at this point.”

Dombrowski said it was the first time a team he’d worked for had been formally accused of stealing signs.

The Times, according to unidentifi­ed sources, said the MLB probe started after Yankees general manager Brian Cashman filed a complaint with the commission­er’s office that included video. The newspaper said the video showed a member of Boston’s training staff looking at his Apple Watch in the dugout and relaying a message to players.

“I think there was something that was suspected of going on,” Yankees outfielder Brett Gardner said before Tuesday night’s game in Baltimore. the dugout, who relayed the informatio­n to players.

The newspaper said video showed Boston assistant athletic trainer Jon Jochim checking his Apple Watch and relaying the info to Red Sox players Brock Holt and second baseman Dustin Pedroia.

The newspaper said one clip showed Pedroia passing along the intelligen­ce to Boston outfielder Chris Young, who formerly played for the Yankees.

The Red Sox won two of three from the Yankees during the series Aug. 18-20. The Times reported that in the first game, after Boston first put a runner on second, Rafael Devers hit a home run. The Red Sox went 5 for 8 in that game when they had a runner at second and won 9-6.

Sign stealing to help hitters know what pitch is coming has long been a part of baseball lore. Most often it happens when a runner at second base peers in to see the catcher’s sign and then subtly flashes a signal — maybe a hand movement, or the positionin­g of his feet — to the batter to let him know whether the next pitch will be a fastball, curveball or something else.

The most famous example sign stealing was a secret for almost a half-century. It took that long before it was positively revealed the New York Giants used a spyglass-andbuzzer system to relay pitch signals to their hitters during their famed 1951 chase of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which culminated with Bobby Thomson’s bottom-of-theninth, winning homer in the decisive Game 3 of the NL playoffs.

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