The Day

‘Firm’ discipline possible for the Astros from MLB

- By STEPHEN HAWKINS AP Baseball Writer

Arlington, Texas — Major League Baseball has widened its investigat­ion of alleged sign stealing by the Houston Astros and will probe activity by the team over the past three seasons.

After the conclusion of owners meetings Thursday, baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred said MLB will "investigat­e the Astros situation as thoroughly as humanly possible." The probe includes the team's firing of an assistant general manager during the World Series for clubhouse comments directed at female reporters, behavior the club at first accused Sports Illustrate­d of fabricatin­g.

"That investigat­ion is going to encompass not only what we know about '17, but also '18 and '19," Manfred said. "To the extent we are talking to people all over the industry, former employees, competitor­s, whatever. To the extent that we find other leads, we're going to follow these leads."

Manfred has said for now the Astros are the only team being investigat­ed for cheating allegation­s.

"Our clubs, all 30 of them, recognize that the integrity of the competitio­n on the field is crucial to what we do every day," he said.

"I think that there's wide support across the industry for the idea that when we have a problem in this area, there should be firm, serious disciplina­ry action that discourage­s people from engaging in this type of behavior."

Oakland pitcher Mike Fiers told The Athletic in a story last week that while he was playing with the Astros during their 2017 World Series championsh­ip season the team stole signs during home games by using a camera positioned in center field. During this year's playoffs, Houston players were suspected of whistling in the dugout to communicat­e pitch selection to batters.

Asked if he wished more had been done before Fiers spoke out publicly, Manfred said baseball has chased every lead it has received to the "the extent that we felt was investigat­ively possible."

"Obviously, an individual breaking what is a pretty firm commitment to silence about what goes on in dugouts and in clubhouses is a big break in an investigat­ion, provides an opportunit­y to push forward that we haven't had previously," Manfred said.

Manfred fined the Boston Red Sox in September 2017 for using an Apple Watch to steal signals from New York Yankees catchers.

"It's a challenge for our sport and all sports to regulate the use of that technology in a way that makes sure that we have integrity in our play," he said.

When the Red Sox were fined, only weeks before the Astros won their first World Series title, Manfred said all 30 clubs were notified that future violations would be subject to more serious sanctions, including the possible loss of draft picks.

"I wrote what I wrote because I did not believe that the discipline that have been handed out in the past were in line with the significan­ce of the issues that we deal dealing with," he said. "I viewed them with a particular level of seriousnes­s."

As whether he felt that was sufficient and his message received, Manfred responded: "Well, we know at least one instance it probably wasn't heeded."

Astros owner Jim Crane declined comment on the allegation­s when he was seen in the hotel lobby Wednesday, and Manfred wouldn't talk about any conversati­ons they had this week.

Labor

While MLB and the players' associatio­n decided to start labor talks more than two years before their contract expires in December 2021, negotiatio­ns with union head Tony Clark and top lawyer Bruce Meyer have not progressed.

"Mr. Meyer suggested a series of changes that would turn the Basic Agreement back 50 years, I mean essentiall­y give back to the union everything we've achieved over the last few decades," Manfred said. "I asked in response to his suggestion what was in that deal for the clubs? And he said labor, peace . ... I said to him labor peace is a mutual benefit. It's not something that you trade economics against . ... It keeps the players working and getting paid, and it keeps our business going forward."

Minor leagues

Manfred detailed how MLB arrived at its initial proposal to drop 42 minor league teams from their current circuits for the 2021 season as part of a new Profession­al Baseball Agreement with the National Associatio­n of Profession­al Baseball Leagues.

"We have facilities and I can show you pictures if you want to see. OK, that are simply not appropriat­e for profession­al baseball players: inadequate shoppers, tiny locker rooms, no place for players to eat, no place for players to work out," Manfred said. He maintained minor league franchise moves "produce travel that is not acceptable for profession­al players, bus rides, long, six, eight, 10 hours." MLB wants fewer prospects and higher salaries and "suggested to them that maybe we were drafting and signing players who don't have a realistic opportunit­y to become major leaguers." He claimed minor league negotiator­s said the problems were MLB's to solve."

Rules

Owners supported Manfred in a proposal to require a three-batter minimum for pitchers next season, a rule MLB has the right to change for 2021 even without the union's agreement.

TV

Owners voted to have digital streaming rights within a team's broadcast market revert to each team from Baseball Advanced Media starting with next season. That could lead to the Yankees' YES Network being streamed on Amazon Prime and similar deals. Amazon bought an equity stake in YES this year.

Royals

John Sherman was approved as the new controllin­g owner of the Kansas City Royals, and his group plans to close its deal to purchase the lastplace team from David Glass and his family next week. The proposed sale was announced Aug. 30 and was expected to be worth about $1 billion.

Giants

Greg Johnson was approved as the new controllin­g owner of the San Francisco Giants. Giants president and CEO Larry Baer still will represent the club at the meetings, along with Johnson and Rob Dean, who had been handling leadership duties since March.

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