Business World

Executive Kennedy says Boston Red Sox won 2018 title fairly

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BOSTON — Whether the Boston Red Sox’s 2018 World Series title was won legitimate­ly is up for debate after Alex Cora was involved in sign-stealing scandals in backto-back seasons with the 2017 champion Houston Astros and Red Sox.

The Red Sox held a press conference on Wednesday — one day after parting ways with Cora — and team president Sam Kennedy made it clear he doesn’t believe the World Series win over the Los Angeles Dodgers is tainted.

Kennedy was asked, “Do you believe you beat the Dodgers fairly and squarely?”

His reply: “Absolutely, yes.” The Red Sox repeatedly declined to answer questions involving their 2018 title, citing that Major League Baseball’s (MLB) investigat­ion is still ongoing.

Cora was identified by MLB on Monday as a ringleader in the Astros’ scheme to steal signs en route to their 2017 World Series championsh­ip, when he was Houston’s bench coach. He became the Red Sox’s manager the next year and led his new team to the title — albeit with lingering suspicions regarding similar illegal sign-stealing.

On Monday, MLB announced major sanctions against Houston, including one-season suspension­s for manager A.J. Hinch and general manager Jeff Luhnow, who were subsequent­ly fired by the Astros.

On Tuesday, Red Sox brass met with Cora and all parties agreed that parting ways was necessary.

“Alex by his own admission, and we agreed, played a central role in what went on in Houston and we all agreed that it was wrong and that we had a responsibi­lity as stewards where that sort of behavior is unacceptab­le,” Red Sox chairman Tom Werner said during the press conference.

Werner requested that the team’s fans withhold judgment on the 2018 team until the investigat­ion is complete.

Kennedy said that it wasn’t anything that occurred in Boston that led to Cora no longer being the manager.

“It is also important to recognize that this collective mutual decision yesterday was related exclusivel­y to the incidents that took place in Houston,” Kennedy said. “... Alex came to the conclusion that he could not effectivel­y lead the organizati­on going forward in light of the commission­er’s findings and the ruling and we came to that conclusion as well.”

While Cora was tabbed as the ringleader of the sign-stealing scheme in Houston, also mentioned was then-player Carlos Beltran, who was recently hired to be manager of the New York Mets.

The Mets haven’t indicated how they plan to handle the situation with Beltran at a time when Cora and Hinch have lost their jobs.

ESPN analyst Mark Teixeira, a former teammate of Beltran on the New York Yankees, says Beltran has to go.

“They have to fire Carlos Beltran,” Teixeira said on ESPN. “There’s no way that Carlos Beltran, especially in the pressure cooker of New York, there’s no way he can be the manager of the Mets . ...

“You cannot have that guy lead your team. The New York papers, the Daily News and the Post and all of the tabloids, will eat up Carlos Beltran every single day until he’s fired.” —

 ?? GREG M. COOPER-USA TODAY SPORTS ?? (FROM LEFT TO RIGHT) BOSTON RED SOX OWNERS John Henry and Tom Werner, President and Chief Executive Officer Samuel H. Kennedy and Chief Baseball Officer Chaim Bloom talk to the media at Fenway Park.
GREG M. COOPER-USA TODAY SPORTS (FROM LEFT TO RIGHT) BOSTON RED SOX OWNERS John Henry and Tom Werner, President and Chief Executive Officer Samuel H. Kennedy and Chief Baseball Officer Chaim Bloom talk to the media at Fenway Park.

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