Houston Chronicle Sunday

Major fouls tarnish the Astros’ star

Franchise reputation crumbles under weight of accusation­s

- By David Barron STAFF WRITER

The orange star with the letter H is the first thing that pops into view on the Astros’ website, and it’s a dominant element of the “Houston Strong” uniform patch the team wore en route to its 2017 World Series victory, the grandest moment in the history of Houston baseball.

But in the eyes of skeptical and envious fans around the country, and more importantl­y, in the questionin­g gaze of Major League Baseball investigat­ors, Houston’s shining star is a tarnished emblem.

MLB commission­er Rob Manfred said Thursday in Arlington, following a meeting of club owners, that the Astros face a two-pronged, intertwine­d investigat­ion that will continue during the fall and winter and that he hopes will be resolved next year.

One investigat­ion concerns allegation­s that the Astros used improper electronic means to steal signs during the 2017, 2018 and 2019 seasons. The other is the abusive conduct of former executive Brandon Taubman toward a group of female reporters following the American League Championsh­ip Series and the team’s reaction to that event.

Both are claims associated with an organizati­on whose philosophy admits pushing the limit of what is acceptable conduct in building and operating one of MLB’s most innovative, most successful teams of late (a winner of 100 games each of the past three seasons) while repeatedly garnering attention for conduct that some find unbecoming of the sport.

‘Casablanca’

In the waggishly theatrical words of Richard Levick, the communicat­ions strategist who advises companies that find themselves outside the lines of acceptable behavior, Houston’s baseball team appears to have transforme­d the bright colors of “Field of Dreams” into the cloudy shades of “Casablanca,” taking an idyllic national pastime to a world where espionage is accepted coin of the realm.

Potential consequenc­es await. Manfred said he has the authority to impose sanctions beyond those set out in baseball’s written codes of conduct but would not elaborate. Recent assorted misdeeds have resulted in lifetime suspension­s, a yearlong suspension, forfeiture of draft picks, and fines.

Under a nightmare scenario for Houston fans, he could impugn the team’s 2017 championsh­ip.

But under any scenario, the combinatio­n of the cheating allegation­s and the Taubman incident, a byproduct of the ballclub’s 2018 acquisitio­n of relief pitcher Roberto Osuna, the public profile of the Astros has shifted. The team has gone from heroes of a stricken city in the wake of Hurricane Harvey to baseball’s equivalent of the NFL’s New England Patriots, the franchise that most outside of its hometown loathes but that all, in some fashion or another, seek to emulate in terms of on-field success.

Whatever happens, likely will not be the same for those who adhere to orange and blue.

“The Astros know they can erase the tarnish off their star by winning, just as the Patriots and others have done before them,” Levick said. “They would be wise to fire the people responsibl­e so they can say ‘that was then, this is now.’

“It will soon be time for the Astros to make a sacrifice.”

‘Mixed support’

The Astros, for the moment, are silent on the cheating allegation­s, citing the continuing MLB investigat­ion. Owner Jim Crane said he would talk “baseball only” in a 14-second interactio­n with reporters at the owners meetings before security intervened. The Astros previously apologized for the conduct of Taubman, who was dismissed after his profane jeers directed toward female reporters in what all now acknowledg­e was a misguided defense of Osuna, the reliever who was acquired by the Astros while serving a suspension under MLB’s domestic violence prevention code.

Astros players also have been silent on the matter, which arose after the team disbanded for the year in the wake of its World Series loss to the Washington Nationals.

But Astros pro-and-con talk in recent weeks has been the primary engine of baseball’s Hot Stove League, the nickname for wintertime conversati­on that generally involves trade talk and contract negotiatio­ns rather than accusation­s that strike at the soul of the game.

Opinions on the severity of the matter, not surprising­ly, vary widely among the Astros’ faithful.

If the allegation­s are proved to be true, “This would be a huge black eye that would taint all of the success we as fans of the Astros, as well as baseball fans in general, have experience­d,” wrote Keith McDaniel, a member of the Facebook group Blessed to be an Astros Fan.

“I’m also shocked at how many Astro fans are taking this so lightly and comical. The integrity of the game has been ripped apart,” McDaniel added. “I hope the investigat­ion shows that it has all been blown out of proportion. But if not, the only way to overcome this scandal is to continue to win. Even then, it’s going to be difficult to regain the reputation that we all thought the Astros earned fair and square.”

Other fans are less concerned, even defiant.

“I don’t care if other teams hate us. We will just keep on winning,” wrote one fan. “This is a witch hunt,” wrote another. “Still a good group of men,” said a third. “I stand by my Astros,” added another group member.

Group member Billy Vidler, noting past allegation­s of chicanery lodged against the Yankees and Red Sox, fears the Astros will be a sacrificia­l lamb for the sins of more favored teams in larger markets.

“MLB had a chance to drop the hammer on Boston and New York and barely gave them a slap on the wrist. They were not going to damage their cash cow,” Vidler said. “Now they have a good team that isn’t as important to the revenue stream for the league as a whole. Now they can come down with Thor’s hammer and stand on their self-righteousn­ess yelling, ‘We’ll deal with cheaters.’ They have their sacrificia­l lamb.”

Similar to the Astros, who have been accused by former pitcher Mike Fiers of employing a video system that enabled them to steal the catcher’s signs to opposing pitchers, the Patriots were accused in 2007 of using improper means to intercept another team’s signals. Coach Bill Belichick was fined, and the team was penalized its first-round draft choice.

Also, in January 2015, Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady was accused of arranging for deflated footballs to be used in the AFC title game against the Indianapol­is Colts. The team was fined and lost draft choices, and Brady was suspended for four games.

New England, however, continues to prosper, with six Super Bowl titles and a 9-1 record entering a weekend game against the Dallas Cowboys. The franchise is valued at $4.1 billion and continues to be the apple of New England’s eye and villains among most of NFL fandom.

The Astros, similarly, have profited under Crane’s ownership. Crane purchased the team for $615 million, with a significan­t amount of that value attached to the team’s interest in a regional sports network that subsequent­ly went bankrupt, and Forbes this year ranked it 10th in value among MLB franchises at $1.8 billion.

In both veins, then, it’s not surprising that some Astros fans aren’t particular­ly offended about being compared with the Patriots, who, by the way, face a Sunday night game Dec. 1 at NRG Stadium, where they will no doubt be booed lustily as frauds and cheaters.

“I do think we are now nationally viewed as similar to the New England Patriots,” said Blessed to be an Astros Fan member

Brandon Kura. “It’s a weird feeling. I kinda like it, because it’s like ‘us versus the world,’ and it will make it that much sweeter if we win another World Series.”

Stephen Klineberg, the Rice University sociologis­t who tracks Houston’s civic psyche through the annual Kinder Houston Area Survey, said the Astros’ status in Houston likely will be unaffected regardless of the outcome of the MLB investigat­ions.

“There is a lot of individual love. People love ( Jose) Altuve. They love (Carlos) Correa,” Klineberg said. “They brought prestige and support and excitement to Houston.

“I think there will be a tendency to downplay this: ‘It’s a bad thing, but it’s not way out of the pale.’ It won’t be viewed as betrayal. There may be disappoint­ment along the lines of ‘maybe they shouldn’t have done it, but it was not a uniquely evil act.’ ”

Levick, the crisis consultant, said the Astros could help their cause by reversing what he describes as a catastroph­ic recent series of public relations blunders that began with the Taubman incident.

He said the team’s initial decision to describe a Sports Illustrate­d report about Taubman’s conduct as inaccurate, followed by a second series of statements saying it would give the matter further study, was “a perfect example of overexuber­ance and poor judgment followed by reflection and poor judgment.”

Not ‘get out of jail free’

The Astros also cited their support of domestic violence prevention groups in subsequent statements in which they acknowledg­ed that the Sports Illustrate­d report was true and that Taubman would be fired. Levick said that statement, while a positive developmen­t, was “not a ‘get out of jail free’ card” for past missteps.

As for the cheating investigat­ion, Levick said the Astros have allowed their critics to dominate the conversati­on by issuing only a brief no-comment statement, which was not posted on the Astros’ website or their social media platforms.

“There is so much selfinflic­ted damage here,” he said. “It’s as if they don’t understand the moment. What they need to do is to meet with MLB privately and negotiate their punishment and to communicat­e with fans that they take this seriously.”

“The Astros,” Levick said, “at one point were America’s team.”

 ?? Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er ?? Astros owner Jim Crane, left, and general manager Jeff Luhnow are facing two investigat­ions by Major League Baseball.
Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er Astros owner Jim Crane, left, and general manager Jeff Luhnow are facing two investigat­ions by Major League Baseball.

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