Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

When titles are tarnished by cheating but not taken away

- By Joe Drape

The Houston Astros’ sign-stealing scheme could be the apex of the cheating era. Or maybe that’s just the way things are now in sports.

In years to come, this might be the week this age of sports came to be known as the “asterisk era.”

During a decade that brought eye-in-the-sky cameras, rogue chemists, executives with malleable morals and Soviet-era spy craft, those two-fisted disrupters — science and technology — have given cheaters seemingly limitless tools to secure victory on playing fields as diverse as the Olympic Games, Major League Baseball, the NFL and horse racing.

The Astros scheme, laid bare in a sober yet searing report from the baseball commission­er early lat week, is the latest embodiment of that old sports saw, “If you ain’t cheating, you ain’t trying.” The 2017 World Series champions mixed high-tech with the low-fi — using a television monitor near the dugout to watch the opposing catcher give his pitching signs, then having teammates bang a trash can to let the batter know what was coming.

For supporters of clean sports, this looked like just one more powerful weapon that athletes, teams and organizati­ons used to win games and skirt the fair-play police, one more instance of the truth about a champion spilling out too late.

In 2014, the Russian Olympic Committee augmented its medal haul by having doping experts collaborat­e with the country’s intelligen­ce services to switch out urine samples through a hole in the testing laboratory’s wall. On their way to six Super Bowl championsh­ips, the New England Patriots have been found guilty of using clandestin­e video surveillan­ce and of somehow ending up with deflated footballs that allowed their quarterbac­k to get a better grip in foul weather. A horse that staged a historic run to the Triple Crown was found to have chemicals associated with performanc­e-enhancing drugs in his system.

Regulators of Olympic sports acknowledg­e that they are mostly outgunned on the science and technology fronts. Instead, they rely on law enforcemen­t sources, whistleblo­wers and moral outrage, all of which are often in short supply.

“It doesn’t take a philosophe­r to know that if you cheat to win, you’re not really a winner,” said Travis Tygart, the chief executive of the United States Anti-Doping Agency, who is perhaps best known for bringing Lance Armstrong’s extensive doping operation to light.

Mr. Tygart and internatio­nal Olympic officials have taken back gold medals and handed out lifetime bans for cheating.

Vacating isn’t used

Vacating titles and ending careers are powerful deterrents, but in America’s profession­al sports leagues, the commission­ers have been resistant to mete out such punishment­s.

MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred handed down yearlong suspension­s for Astros manager A.J. Hinch and general manager Jeff Luhnow. Both were subsequent­ly fired by the team’s owner, Jim Crane. The Boston Red Sox owners, John Henry and Tom Werner, also parted ways with their manager — Alex Cora, who was a bench coach with Houston during its sign-stealing operation and was identified as a major part of the scheme.

In addition, the Astros were stripped of their first- and secondroun­d draft picks for the next two years and fined the team $5

“It doesn’t take a philosophe­r to know that if you cheat to win, you’re not really a winner,” Travis Tygart Chief executive of the United States Anti-Doping Agency

million. The Red Sox, who remain under investigat­ion for similar violations, may soon be penalized, too.

Still, Houston retains its title as the 2017 World Series champion. Presumably, Boston will retain its 2018 title. Would stripping those titles make a difference?

“If the goal was to uphold the honesty and sanctity of the game for a broader community, the ultimate penalty is to vacate the wins and the titles,” said Ann Skeet, a sports and leadership ethicist for the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at the University of Santa Clara in California. “But there are some built-in conflicts — the commission­er works for the owners. They share revenue. Their fortunes are tied together.”

It’s true that lines between right and wrong have become blurry. Stealing signs in baseball is as old as the game, though using electronic­s (or stationing a scout with binoculars and signaling equipment in the center-field stands) is illegal. NFL teams study endless hours of video of opponents, but filming opposing coaches is a no-no. Performanc­e-enhancing drugs are illegal, unless officials grant an exemption for a drug that, say, treats asthma.

But the rules are there, and F. Clark Power worries that by flouting them, more is being lost than a sense of fair play. Mr. Power is the founder of the Play Like a Champion program, which promotes character education through sports and focuses on proper coaching instructio­n in youth sports, especially for at-risk children.

He likes to reference what he sees when he witnesses the joy of 7-year-olds playing hide-and-seek.

“Every one of them knows that to have a fair game, you’ve got to keep your eyes closed while you count,” said Mr. Power, who has taught at the University of Notre Dame since 1982.

“We need to understand, if we are going to endorse cheating as a means to an end, the children are watching,” he said. “So it becomes a question of how do you want to raise your kids? We can’t get much lower as a culture if cheating is no longer a moral issue but a form of coping. We need to change the conversati­on.”

Accountabi­lity rolled downhill when an investigat­ion into the Patriots found it “more probable than not” that quarterbac­k Tom Brady was “at least generally aware” that the balls used in his team’s victory over the Indianapol­is Colts in the 2015 AFC championsh­ip game had been deflated.

The franchise, which is owned by Robert K. Kraft, had tangled seven years earlier with NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell over a sign-stealing scheme. Scouts filmed the sidelines of upcoming opponents and matched play calls to actual plays so Patriots players would know what was coming. The scheme and investigat­ion became known as “Spygate.” The NFL fined Bill Belichick, the head coach, fined the franchise and took away the team’s first-round draft pick.

A few weeks after the crime that came to be known as “Deflategat­e,” the Patriots defeated Seattle, 2824, in Super Bowl XLIX. Eventually, Mr. Brady was suspended four games, and the franchise was fined $1 million and docked two draft picks. And yet this season, the Patriots were at it again, their video cameras drifting to the sideline of an upcoming opponent.

Tainted champion

America’s profession­al leagues do not have a monopoly on conflicts of interest. In April 2018, a colt named Justify failed a doping test after winning the Santa Anita Derby, a victory the horse needed to qualify for the Kentucky Derby the following month.

Under California horse racing rules, Justify should have been disqualifi­ed and his $600,000 purse money returned. Instead, California regulators waited four months to render judgment, by which point the colt had become the 13th Triple Crown winner and been sold as a stallion for $60 million.

Another champion, another asterisk.

 ?? Associate Press ?? Houston Astros manager AJ Hinch, shown in October during the American League Division Series vs. Tampa Bay, was fired by the Astros following baseball’s investigat­ion of his team’s sign stealing.
Associate Press Houston Astros manager AJ Hinch, shown in October during the American League Division Series vs. Tampa Bay, was fired by the Astros following baseball’s investigat­ion of his team’s sign stealing.
 ?? Reuters ?? New England quarterbac­k Tom Brady went on to win Super Bowl XLIX vs. Seattle in February 2015 after being found to have used illegally deflated footballs earlier in the season. He was suspended four games in 2016 for his role in ‘Deflategat­e.’
Reuters New England quarterbac­k Tom Brady went on to win Super Bowl XLIX vs. Seattle in February 2015 after being found to have used illegally deflated footballs earlier in the season. He was suspended four games in 2016 for his role in ‘Deflategat­e.’

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