USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Former Astros’ GM files suit vs. team,

- Gabe Lacques

Former Houston Astros general manager Jeff Luhnow filed a civil lawsuit Nov. 9 against his old team, alleging that Major League Baseball’s investigat­ion into the sign-stealing scandal that cost him his job was a “negotiated resolution” between the league and Astros owner Jim Crane that ensured Luhnow would be fired and the team would retain its tainted 2017 World Series title.

Luhnow received a one-year suspension from Major League Baseball on Jan. 13, upon conclusion of its investigat­ion, and was fired that day by Crane. Now, his suspension served, Luhnow is seeking the $22 million that remained on his contract from the franchise that, he claims in his legal filing, he “transforme­d from the worst team in Major League Baseball to one of the best in less than a decade.”

MLB declined to comment on the suit, while the Astros did not respond to a request for comment from USA TODAY Sports at press time.

Luhnow’s well-documented teardown and buildup of the Astros – who lost at least 106 games in three consecutiv­e seasons, two under his watch beginning in 2012 – resulted in a 2017 World Series championsh­ip, three consecutiv­e American League West titles and a 2019 AL pennant.

Luhnow’s hyper-efficient management doctrine spread to other franchises and even to MLB’s central office. Yet Luhnow turned from visionary to villain just weeks after the 2019 World Series, when The Athletic first reported that the Astros’ 2017 championsh­ip was won while an elaborate and illegal electronic sign-stealing scandal was executed underneath Minute Maid Park.

MLB’s launched soon investigat­ion thereafter and found Luhnow and manager A.J. Hinch failed to properly inform staff and players of league mandates against illegal signsteali­ng. The league also claimed Luhnow, in acknowledg­ing emails from lower-level staffers, had direct knowledge of the scheme – which involved illegally viewing a TV monitor and banging on a trash can to pass on opposing teams’ signs.

Luhnow’s lawsuit, filed in Harris County District Court, paints a different picture: That MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred and Crane – who hired Luhnow in December 2011 – reached an agreement that would absolve Crane of responsibi­lity while ensuring Luhnow took the fall.

“MLB’s ‘investigat­ion,’ ” Luhnow’s claim says, “... went to great lengths to exonerate Crane and scapegoate­d Luhnow for a sign-stealing scandal that he had no knowledge of and played no part in.”

The lawsuit provides no evidence of an agreement between Manfred and Crane to salvage the team’s World Series title.

Luhnow’s suit comes days after Hinch – suspended and fired the same day as Luhnow – was hired to manage the Detroit Tigers. Additional­ly, the Boston Red Sox rehired manager Alex Cora, with whom they parted ways two days after his role in the sign-stealing scandal as Astros bench coach was revealed.

Luhnow’s future in the game is far murkier. His lawsuit, then, pulls few punches.

It insists that no credible evidence exists of Luhnow’s knowledge of the scheme, and that despite interviewi­ng 68 witnesses and reviewing voluminous electronic communicat­ions, “produced only one untrustwor­thy source – the actual ringleader of the Astros’ signsteali­ng schemes who ‘implicated’ Luhnow to save his own job.”

That would be Tom KochWeser, the team’s director of advance informatio­n who remains

employed by the club. Luhnow’s suit berates MLB for failing to reference, in its report, any of the 22,000 text messages sent and received by Koch-Weser – messages it claims do not reference Luhnow.

The suit claims the Astros told Koch-Weser he’d keep his job “so long as his actions were sanctioned by his supervisor­s, including Luhnow,” and that Koch-Weser’s testimony to MLB that Luhnow had knowledge of the scheme remain uncorrobor­ated.

Luhnow claims Manfred “ignored his findings that the players and video room staff – not the Astros’ front office – were responsibl­e for the sign-stealing schemes. That is because the commission­er vetted potential penalties with Crane, and the two exchanged a series of proposals.”

MLB fined Crane $5 million and stripped the club of four draft picks but allowed the Astros to retain their title.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States