Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

High-tech leads way to wave of lows

Analytics era has one general manager, three managers on widening list of victims

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NEW YORK — Technology unleashed baseball’s analytics era, and now it’s holding the sport prisoner.

AJ Hinch, Alex Cora and Carlos Beltrán are casualties, a triple play of hubris. At the cutting edge with the Houston Astros, now they have been cut. Their sign-stealing system exposed, all three managers were deposed within a whirlwind 72 hours this week that raised questions about the prevalence of the sport’s rule-breakers.

What’s next in a game grappling with innovation and plagued by paranoia?

Video rooms and dugouts are now monitored by Major League Baseball, like proctors pacing an exam room to stifle students’ temptation to cheat. Bench and bullpen telephones are monitored, Big Brother in the commission­er’s office listening in to assure compliance. Television feeds in clubhouses were ordered to be delayed by a minimum 8 seconds last year to prevent prying eyes from decoding signals in real time.

Should hitters be blocked from reviewing their plate appearance­s between atbats? Sure, it helps them detect flaws in their approach. But they also might see a sequence of the catcher’s fingers that tip pitches.

These are the types of questions MLB executives in the sport’s new Rockefelle­r Center offices are thinking about as spring training approaches. MLB commission­er Rob Manfred’s one-season suspension­s of Hinch and Houston general manager Jeff Luhnow signaled the harsh repercussi­ons.

“It’s a serious problem for baseball, the merging of technology and an ancient game. It seems to me that cheating — and this was clearly cheating — had to be stepped on very firmly,” former commission­er Fay Vincent said. “Technology presents a challenge as well as an opportunit­y, and it also seems to me that cheating has become endemic throughout our culture, and this is a very good sign for baseball to say we’re not going to put up with it.”

Infield shifts, upper cuts and quick hooks became the norm in the 2010s as programmer­s prevailed over scouts. Paranoia proliferat­ed, fear opponents had found the secret sauce to success, within the rules or not. Already worried about dwindling attendance, accusation­s of tanking, lengthenin­g games and the rise of the Three True Outcomes, executives fret over how to rein in some of the most competitiv­e people on the planet who drive billion-dollar businesses with the goal of outsmartin­g each other.

Hinch’s decision not to stop his Astros players from stealing signs cost him his job, and Manfred questioned Luhnow’s protestati­on that he knew nothing. Cora was Houston’s bench coach in 2017 and Beltrán the Astros senior player was seeking one last moment of glory at age 40 and, in his 20th major league season, rewarded with his first title ring.

But their roles as renegade ringleader­s caught up with them, both identified by Manfred as culprits. Cora had gone on to become Boston’s manager and led the Red Sox to the 2018 World Series championsh­ip. Beltrán was hired by the Mets in November.

When Oakland pitcher Mike Fiers went public in November to The Athletic about sign-stealing in his Astros days, he wound up taking out 10% of the major league managers, exposing a dark side that became a blemish.

“That sort of behavior is not acceptable,” Red Sox chairman Tom Werner said.

Boston jettisoned Cora one day after Manfred’s report. CEO Sam Kennedy maintained “it was ultimately an easy decision for the Red Sox and for Alex.”

While Cora appears certain to be suspended for his actions in Houston, Beltrán was not discipline­d because he was a player at the time of the transgress­ion, not part of management.

Algorithms have led to fixation on velocity, spin rates and launch angles, created handheld devices used to measure mechanics from the majors down to youth ball. Teams worry whether zoom lenses are spying on them. Some clubs have been rumored to sweep clubhouses on the road, leery of listening devices.

From the Black Sox who threw the 1919 World Series, to the color barrier that didn’t end until 1947, to Pete Rose’s gambling and the swollen steroids era sluggers of the 1990s and early 2000s, tarnish has been a part of baseball along with triumph. This time, it’s high-tech that has awakened low motives.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Astros manager AJ Hinch won a World Series title in 2017 that will best be remembered by the cheating scheme that eventually cost Hinch his job.
Associated Press Astros manager AJ Hinch won a World Series title in 2017 that will best be remembered by the cheating scheme that eventually cost Hinch his job.

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