Porterville Recorder

Red Sox denied draft pick in wake of scandal

- By RONALD BLUM and JIMMY GOLEN

NEW YORK (AP) — The Boston Red Sox got off lightly in Major League Baseball’s signsteali­ng scandal after Commission­er Rob Manfred concluded their violations were far less flagrant than those of the Houston Astros.

Boston was stripped of its second-round pick in this year’s amateur draft for sign stealing in 2018 and former manager Alex Cora was suspended through the 2020 postseason for his previous conduct as the Astros’ bench coach. Manfred had held off a decision on Cora until now.

Manfred issued his ruling Wednesday, announcing Red Sox replay system operator J.T. Watkins violated the prohibitio­n on in-game use of video to revise sign sequences provided to players. Watkins, who denied the allegation­s, was suspended without pay through this year’s postseason and prohibited from serving as the replay room operator through 2021.

Boston won the 2018 World Series, but Manfred said misdeeds didn’t occur during the postseason. He found Boston’s cheating was not as pervasive or egregious as the behavior of the Astros, whom he determined repeatedly used a video camera in the outfield to steal catchers’ signs during their run to the 2017 championsh­ip and again the following season.

Manager AJ Hinch and general manager Jeff Luhnow were suspended through the 2020 postseason on Jan. 13 and fired that day by the Astros. Houston was fined $5 million, the maximum under the Major League Constituti­on, and lost its next two first- and second-round amateur draft selections.

Boston’s lost pick was No. 52 overall, with a bonus pool value of just over $1.4 million.

“Unlike the Houston Astros’ 2017 conduct, in which players communicat­ed to the batter from the dugout area in real time the precise type of pitch about to be thrown, Watkins’ conduct, by its very nature, was far more limited in scope and impact,” Manfred wrote.

A 30-year-old from Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Watkins is a 2012 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy. The catcher was selected by Boston in the 10th round of that year’s amateur draft and played in the Red Sox system until 2015.

Manfred called Watkins a “key participan­t” in the 2017 Apple Watch incident, saying he relayed decoded signs from Boston’s replay room to the dugout, at first with a runner and then with the watch to an athletic trainer.

Watkins compiled advance scouting informatio­n, and part of his job was to decode opposing pitchers’ sequences ahead of series. His replay room was moved from a remove location to adjacent to the dugout in 2018.

He declined comment, the Red Sox said. Manfred said misconduct occurred during the 2018 regular season but not in the postseason, when MLB began to place staff in video rooms to monitor conduct.

MLB interviewe­d 65 people, including 34 past and present Boston players. Manfred concluded Cora did not know of Watkins’ conduct but “did not effectivel­y communicat­e to Red Sox players the sign-stealing rules.”

Cora, an infielder on Boston’s 2007 champions, was mentioned 11 times in Manfred’s decision on the Astros, which said he developed the cheating system. But Manfred held off on a penalty until after investigat­ing the Red Sox. Cora left Houston for Boston after the 2017 season.

Fallout from the January penalties caused Cora and newly hired New York Mets manager Carlos Beltr√°n to lose their jobs. Beltr√°n, the senior player on the 2017 Astros, was the only player identified by MLB as participat­ing in the scheme to place a monitor near Houston’s dugout to receive video from the outfield and have players bang on a trash can to signal breaking pitches.

Red Sox bench coach Ron Roenicke was promoted to interim manager after Cora’s exit. The interim tag was set to come off Roenicke.

The Red Sox largely escape being labeled as tainted champions. The NFL’S New England Patriots were found to have stolen signals in their 2007 AFC championsh­ip season by videotapin­g opposing coaches.

“MLB acknowledg­ed the front office’s extensive efforts to communicat­e and enforce the rules and concluded that Alex Cora, the coaching staff, and most of the players did not engage in, nor were they aware of, any violations,” Red Sox president Sam Kennedy said in a statement. “Regardless, these rule violations are unacceptab­le. We apologize to our fans and Major League Baseball.”

Red Sox players were promised immunity in MLB’S investigat­ion, but Manfred said even if players had been subject to discipline, none would have been punished.

He wrote “11 witnesses identified features of Watkins’ ingame communicat­ions that indicated to them that Watkins had at times acquired the sign sequence informatio­n from the replay room during the game.”

Manfred said six witnesses claimed they observed Watkins writing signs during games and four said they saw him use gestures or notes to communicat­e signs when a video monitor was present, which made them think he was trying to conceal prohibited conduct.

Watkins told MLB that any informatio­n he provided during games was obtained from advance scouting. He said any gestures he made were innocuous and suggested the possibilit­y players may have been confused by his providing informatio­n during games, not understood his preparator­y work or may have accused him in a competitiv­e move only after moving on to other teams.

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 ?? AP PHOTO BY ELISE AMENDOLA ?? From left, in a Jan. 15, 2020, file photo, Boston Red Sox owner John Henry, chairman Tom Werner and CEO Sam Kennedy react during a news conference at Fenway Park in Boston. The Boston Red Sox were stripped of their second-round pick in this year’s amateur draft by Major League Baseball for breaking video rules in 2018 and former manager Alex Cora was suspended through the 2020 postseason for his conduct as bench coach with the Houston Astros the previous year. Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred announced his decision Wednesday, April 22, concluding Red Sox replay system operator J.T. Watkins used in-game video to revise sign sequences provided to players.
AP PHOTO BY ELISE AMENDOLA From left, in a Jan. 15, 2020, file photo, Boston Red Sox owner John Henry, chairman Tom Werner and CEO Sam Kennedy react during a news conference at Fenway Park in Boston. The Boston Red Sox were stripped of their second-round pick in this year’s amateur draft by Major League Baseball for breaking video rules in 2018 and former manager Alex Cora was suspended through the 2020 postseason for his conduct as bench coach with the Houston Astros the previous year. Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred announced his decision Wednesday, April 22, concluding Red Sox replay system operator J.T. Watkins used in-game video to revise sign sequences provided to players.

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