East Bay Times

Hinch reflects on Astros scandal

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Detroit Tigers manager A.J. Hinch reflected on the Houston Astros sign-stealing scandal that cost him his job as the team’s manager in his return to Houston on Monday, saying it put a “cloud over the sport.”

Hinch was suspended by baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred for a year in January 2020 and subsequent­ly fired by owner Jim Crane for his role in the scheme that violated rules by using a video camera to steal catchers’ signs during Houston’s run to the 2017 World Series title and again in the 2018 season.

He was hired by the Tigers this offseason and discussed the scandal prior to Monday night’s opener of a three-game series against the Astros.

Asked whether he still takes pride in leading the Astros to their first title in a season tainted by cheating, he gave a long and frank answer acknowledg­ing the team’s wrongdoing.

“I do believe that we did some good things in Houston,” Hinch said. “I do believe we were wrong in the behavior and the decisions that we made in 2017, and it’s hard to have that cloud over the sport and be responsibl­e for that and be the man that was that was the manager that it happened on my watch.”

Hinch spent five seasons in Houston, helping turn around a team that had sunk to embarrassi­ng lows during a rebuild in the years before he arrived. The Astros won more than 100 games in each of his last three seasons, capped by a franchise-best 107 wins in 2019 when they lost to the

Washington Nationals in the World Series.

Hinch added that he has largely been quiet in publicly reflecting on his time in Houston because his “relationsh­ip with that time is complicate­d.” He said he’s tried to keep the stain of his actions away from the Tigers since they hired him.

“It’s something I take very seriously,” he said. “I will continue to apologize not only to the Houston fans, but to all the fans around baseball and continue to repeat how wrong it was. And for that, we’re going to have to live with that for the rest of our careers. It’s part of my story.”

There’s been quite a bit of turnover on Houston’s roster since Hinch left, but several players remain from his teams and were excited about seeing him on Monday.

“He did amazing things for this organizati­on,” shortstop Carlos Correa said. “It’s really special. I learned a lot from A.J. He was a great manager to us.”

The Astros have faced hostile and angry crowds on the road early this season from fans still upset about Houston’s cheating — spectators weren’t allowed to attend games last season because of the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

NATIONALS GET BACK SCHWARBER, BELL, HARRISON >> Josh Bell swung at golfball-sized Wiffle balls darting about at what he estimates was 75 to 95 mph. Kyle Schwarber used virtual reality goggles to study major league pitching and took some realworld hacks with the help of a tee and net delivered to his home.

Whatever it took to try to get ready for their debuts with the Washington Nationals — 11 days after the MLB season actually began.

Bell, Schwarber and Josh Harrison were reinstated from the injured list by the Nationals, making the team’s roster nearly whole again after a coronaviru­s outbreak sidelined nine players and caused postponeme­nts of four games.

“Our lineup’s intact,” manager Dave Martinez said before Washington’s series opener at the St. Louis Cardinals, when Schwarber started in left field, Bell at first base and Harrison at second — just as they had been expected to be for Game 1 of 2021.

“I talked to them this morning when they landed and asked how they were doing,” said Martinez, whose team entered Monday with a 1-5 record and on a five-game losing streak. “And without hesitation, all three of them said to put them in the lineup, that they were ready to go.”

METS-PHILLIES POSTPONED >> The Mets sidesteppe­d another meteorolog­ical miscue in New York.

A day after pushing starter Marcus Stroman to pitch amid rain that paused play after seven minutes, the Mets called off their game Monday against Philadelph­ia with another downpour en route, rescheduli­ng it as part of a single-admission doublehead­er today.

The decision was announced about two hours before Monday’s scheduled first pitch.

The rainout follows a blunder by the Mets ballpark operations staff, which powered ahead with a first pitch Sunday afternoon, only to have umpires waive the teams off the field two outs into the top of the first inning. Home teams make decisions regarding delays before games start, but once they’re under way, that power transfers to the umpires.

ANOTHER RANGERS RELIEVER HAS SURGERY >> Texas Rangers right-hander Jonathan Hernandez had ligament reconstruc­tion surgery on his right elbow, just less than two weeks after fellow reliever José Leclerc had the same procedure, and their bullpen will also be without hard-throwing Matt Bush until at least July.

Both Hernandez and Leclerc will be sidelined until at least early in the 2022 season.

TWO CUBS COACHES TEST POSITIVE >> The Chicago Cubs are concerned about a possible COVID-19 outbreak after two coaches tested positive for the virus and three relievers were placed on the COVID-19-related injured list.

 ?? PHIL LONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Regarding the Astros signsteali­ng scandal, Tigers manager A.J. Hinch says: “I do believe we were wrong in the behavior and the decisions that we made in 2017.”
PHIL LONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Regarding the Astros signsteali­ng scandal, Tigers manager A.J. Hinch says: “I do believe we were wrong in the behavior and the decisions that we made in 2017.”

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