Los Angeles Times

Turner goes deep on Manfred

He’s irate at commission­er calling Series trophy a ‘piece of metal’

- By Jorge Castillo

— The Dodgers have reached the doorstep of a championsh­ip only to watch opponents celebrate a title at Dodger Stadium twice in the last three seasons. Several players in their clubhouse know how difficult it is to reach the summit and win a World Series. The franchise’s drought is on its 32nd year.

So when Justin Turner saw Major League Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred’s comments Sunday in which he defended his punishment for the Houston Astros’ illegal sign-stealing scheme and referred to the World Series trophy as a “piece of metal,” rage boiled.

“I don’t know if the commission­er has ever won anything in his life,” Turner said in front of his locker Monday. “Maybe he hasn’t. But the reason every guy’s in this room, the reason every guy is working out all offseason, and showing up to camp early and putting in all the time and effort is specifical­ly for that trophy, which, by the way, is called the Commission­er’s Trophy.

“So for him to devalue it the way he did yesterday just tells me how out of touch he is with the players in this game. At this point the only thing devaluing that trophy is that it says ‘Commission­er’ on it.”

Manfred offered the descriptio­n of the trophy in response to the notion that the Astros should have been forced to vacate the 2017 cham

pionship. The commission­er explained he didn’t see the point in that or adding an asterisk to the achievemen­t. He said the league had “the intestinal fortitude to share the results of the investigat­ion.”

“Well, it is metal,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said.

“So he is accurate. I think he understand­s the value in what it signifies.”

A firestorm erupted in November when Mike Fiers, a pitcher on the 2017 Astros, told the Athletic that the Astros cheated en route to winning the World Series.

Tension simmered through the offseason as baseball conducted its investigat­ion. The league hoped the ordeal would die over the winter and all would proceed as normal. That was a terrible miscalcula­tion.

Fuel has been poured on the debacle over the last month, igniting a fire that isn’t just about the Astros’ banging of trash cans anymore.

It began when Astros AllStars Alex Bregman and Jose Altuve fumbled through the team’s first public comments last month. It continued last week when Astros owner Jim Crane, Bregman and Altuve botched a news conference the organizati­on had supposedly planned to remedy the situation.

Astros shortstop Carlos Correa fanned the flames over the weekend when he passionate­ly — and explicitly — fired back at Cody Bellinger of the Dodgers for his unfiltered comments on the situation.

On Monday, Bellinger declined to extend the quarrel between the two. “I didn’t take any offense to it,” Bellinger said. “I have no reaction to it. It doesn’t change what I thought at all.”

The outrage reached another level, beyond the Astros organizati­on, Sunday with Manfred’s comments, motivating the 35-year-old Turner, one of the most prominent players on one of the sport’s flagship franchises, to blast the commission­er as no other player had done. It’s open season on the commission­er and Turner is far from the only player fuming.

“If all we’re doing is playing for a piece of metal, why do we have this league?” Dodgers infielder Max Muncy wondered.

Turner didn’t agree with Manfred when the commission­er said the humiliatio­n the Astros have faced and will continue to encounter is enough punishment.

He said he found Manfred warning opposing pitchers not to plunk Astros batters ironic for a simple reason: Hitters knowing what’s coming can be just as dangerous for pitchers.

Above all, Turner, like many of his peers, doesn’t believe the reported findings from the league’s investigat­ion into the Astros’ cheating were sufficient. He believes the commission­er failed.

“I think it all comes down to everyone keeps saying, ‘The facts, the facts. You don’t know the facts. These are the facts,’ ” Turner said. “I don’t think anyone knows the facts. I think everyone just wants to hear all the facts. And I think that the commission­er didn’t do a good job of revealing all the facts to us. I still think there’s some stuff that we don’t know.”

Manfred said he couldn’t conduct an effective investigat­ion without granting players immunity in exchange for honesty.

The only direct punishment the league levied was suspending Astros manager A.J. Hinch and general manager Jeff Luhnow for a season, stripping the Astros of their top two picks in the next two drafts and fining the organizati­on $5 million.

Hinch and Luhnow were quickly fired while Carlos Beltran and Alex Cora, the only other members of the 2017 Astros mentioned in MLB’s report, lost their managerial jobs within days.

Turner said Manfred “set a weak precedent” with his decision not to discipline players.

“Now anyone who goes forward and cheats to win a World Series,” Turner said, “they can live with themselves knowing that, ‘Oh, it’s OK. … We’ll cheat in the World Series and bring the title back to L.A. Screw Dave Roberts and screw Andrew [Friedman]. It’s just those guys losing their job. I still get to be called a champion the rest of my life.’

“So the precedent was set by [Manfred] yesterday in this case.”

Turner maintained the Astros didn’t deserve the World Series title.

He emphasized that winning a championsh­ip is a career-defining feat. He pointed to the criticism retired quarterbac­k Dan Marino, one of his favorite players growing up as a Miami Dolphins fan, has received for never winning a Super Bowl.

Turner asserted justice would be forcing the Astros to vacate the title. The rings should be confiscate­d, the banner at Minute Maid Park should be removed, and the Commission­er’s Trophy should be returned. To Turner, it isn’t just a piece of metal.

“Sorry,” Turner said, “a World Series championsh­ip is earned.”

‘At this point the only thing devaluing that trophy is ... it says “Commission­er” on it.’ — Justin Turner, on baseball commission­er Rob Manfred calling World Series trophy ‘a piece of metal’

Short hops

The Dodgers signed outfielder Terrance Gore to a minor-league contract with an invitation to majorleagu­e spring training. Gore, 28, has spent parts of six seasons in the majors, primarily as a pinch-running specialist . ... Brusdar Graterol, the hard-throwing prospect the Dodgers acquired last week, completed his first bullpen since reporting to camp after being sidelined with an illness. The 21-year-old righthande­r tossed 25 pitches . ... First baseman Tyler White has been invited to Dodgers camp after clearing waivers and being outrighted off the 40-man roster. White was recently designated for assignment.

 ?? Gregory Bull Associated Press ?? JUSTIN TURNER is angry at Commission­er Rob Manfred’s handling of the Astros’ cheating scandal and his comments Sunday, saying they show “how out of touch he is with the players in this game.”
Gregory Bull Associated Press JUSTIN TURNER is angry at Commission­er Rob Manfred’s handling of the Astros’ cheating scandal and his comments Sunday, saying they show “how out of touch he is with the players in this game.”

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