New York Post

Houston backtracks: fires assistant GM, apologizes to reporter after clubhouse outburst

- By KEN DAVIDOFF

WASHINGTON — The Astros fired assistant general manager Brandon Taubman on Thursday, concluding one chapter of a ghastly saga that has hijacked this World Series.

Still to be determined: Whether the Astros pay any further price, be it in discipline or dollars, for their initial attempts to smear the Sports Illustrate­d reporter who broke the story documentin­g Taubman’s job-ending behavior.

Jeff Luhnow, the Astros’ president of baseball operations and general manager, informed Taubman, a graduate of Syosset High School on Long Island, of his fate on Thursday morning. Taubman, the Astros made clear first in a statement then in a Luhnow news conference at Nationals Park, targeted at least one female journalist Saturday night, moments after the Astros eliminated the Yankees in the AL Championsh­ip Series, when he shouted, “Thank God we got Osuna! I’m so f-----g glad we got Osuna!”

The woman, who was standing with two other female journalist­s at the time of the tirade, wore a purple bracelet recognizin­g domestic violence and peacefully protested the Astros’ acquisitio­n last year of closer Roberto Osuna, who served a 75-game suspension for violating baseball’s domestic-violence rules, by tweeting out phone numbers of women’s services each time Osuna took the mound.

“His conduct does not reflect the values of our organizati­on, and we believe this is the most appropriat­e course of action,” the Astros wrote of Taubman.

Such a statement would carry more water if the Astros hadn’t chosen first to attack the messenger, Sports Illustrate­d’s Stephanie Apstein, with a statement calling the story “misleading and completely irresponsi­ble” and an “attempt to fabricate a story where one does not exist.”

On Thursday, the Astros wrote, “We sincerely apologize to Stephanie Apstein, Sports Illustrate­d and to all individual­s who witnessed this incident or were offended by the

inappropri­ate conduct. The Astros in no way intended to minimize the issues related to domestic violence.”

The post-incident dumpster fire occurred, Luhnow acknowledg­ed, as a result of a minimal attempt to determine the truth. Taubman lied to his superiors about what transpired and produced a corroborat­ing witness, and the Astros couldn’t wait to put out the fire — only to see it grow exponentia­lly when multiple corroborat­ing witnesses to the SI story instantly emerged.

“I think when a story comes out that’s negative, you have two choices: You either respond immediatel­y if you think it’s potentiall­y not true, or you wait and figure out what the facts are and then respond,” Luhnow said. “And we made the wrong decision. We responded quickly thinking that it was not true. And it turned out that that was an incorrect way to go about it.”

Luhnow would not identify the person who wrote the statement, saying, “There were a lot of people involved in reviewing it, looking at it, approving it. It was on behalf of the Astros.” He said that he was one of those people.

Though MLB was in the loop regarding the situation and encouraged Luhnow to take questions, it also has the power to fine the organizati­on and suspend other employees.

“The person that was responsibl­e for making those inappropri­ate comments has been terminated from employment with the Astros. And that’s the action that we’ve taken at this point,” Luhnow said.

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Brandon Taubman

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