The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

McGuirk: MLB inquiry nearly done

- By Tim Tucker ttucker@ajc.com

Braves chairman and CEO Terry McGuirk, who had made no public comments about the rule-breaking scandal that has rocked the franchise for the past two weeks, largely held to that stance when asked about the MLB investigat­ion before Monday’s groundbrea­king ceremony for the team’s new spring training complex.

“We’re going to wait until MLB in the very near future (makes an announceme­nt),” McGuirk said. “It has been basically wrapped up for a while. But ... we respect all of baseball’s timelines on making announceme­nts during the playoffs.”

Then he added: “Things are going along great at the Braves. We had our organizati­onal meetings. We’re moving full speed ahead. So we’ll hold off on any comments.”

Asked if the facts of the case are as bad as they seem, McGuirk said: “No comment. That’s sort of a pejorative question.”

Asked if the Braves ultimately will be transparen­t with the public about exactly what transpired, McGuirk said: “I don’t think there will be any questions (unanswered) when we are able to discuss it.”

As for when that will be, McGuirk said it could be “maybe days” but then clarified that to mean after the World Series.

“Baseball sets the agenda on the timeline on this thing,” he said. “And so it’s out of the Braves’ hands as far as when it’s appropriat­e to discuss.”

Asked if anyone else (beyond former general manager John Coppolella and former internatio­nal scouting supervisor Gordon Blakeley) will be forced to leave the Braves’ organizati­on as a result of the matter, McGuirk glanced at the reporter’s recorder and said, “We’re not going to make any more comments.”

When announcing Coppolella’s exit Oct. 2, the Braves said “the resignatio­n comes as a result of a breach of Major League Baseball rules regarding the internatio­nal player market.”

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