USA TODAY International Edition

MLB sign stealing ignites fierce debate

- Bob Nightengal­e Columnist USA TODAY

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – The Major League Baseball general managers slowly trickled out through the resort courtyard late Thursday morning to catch rides to the airport, talking and laughing with one another, giving their best Thanksgivi­ng wishes, and promising to catch up on the phone.

One GM stood off to the side, obscured by the tall bushes toward the check- in desk, not talking to a soul.

Jeff Luhnow, general manager of the Astros, was the man everyone was talking about at these annual GM meetings, but for all of the wrong reasons.

There might be 30 different agendas at these meetings, but this time virtually all were united on one front. They want to see the Astros go down. And go down hard.

They want the Astros to pay a fortune in penalties, being fined a record amount of money, forfeiting draft picks, internatio­nal signing bonuses, and two even told USA TODAY Sports they wish MLB would force them to vacate the 2017 World Series title.

“They’ve been cheating, they still are cheating, and it’s time MLB puts a stop to it,” one National League GM told USA TODAY Sports only on the condition of anonymity because MLB instructed them not to publicly discuss the Astros allegation­s. “Come on, they won 60 games at home this year. Look at their numbers when guys are on base ( MLBbest .282) since 2017. The banging of garbage cans and pipes. The whistles. Everything.

“It’s one thing to steal signs with your eyes. We all do that. It’s another to do it electronic­ally, and that’s what they’ve been doing.

“This tarnishes everything they’ve done. There should be a huge asterisk next to their World Series title.”

The Dodgers, who lost to the Astros in seven games in the 2017 World Series, are convinced more than ever that the Astros cheated. They closely reviewed tapes of Yu Darvish’s starts in Game 3 and Game 7. He was rocked in both starts, lasting just 12⁄ innings in each start, yielding a 21.60 ERA in the World Series. He faced a total of 22 batters and didn’t have a single strikeout, generating only four swing- and- misses out of his 96 pitches, and yielding a .474 batting average.

The Dodgers knew something was amiss and heard the Astros boasting after the World Series that Darvish was tipping his pitches. Darvish acknowledg­ed the same during the winter. One problem.

The Dodgers, after studying the video, said there are no signs at all that Darvish tipped his pitches. They couldn’t find a single time when he openly displayed a tendency to let the Astros know what pitch was coming.

“They would do it in different ways,” one executive said. “If they weren’t banging on the pipes, they would disguise it by yelling out from the dugout. If they called your first name, it was a fastball. If they called you by your late name, it was a breaking ball.

“And there’s no way they could pick that up unless they had a live feed off the TV cameras.”

Major League Baseball has launched an investigat­ion in which it plans to speak to former and current Astros players. Athletics starter Mike Fiers, who played for the Astros in 2017, told The Athletic that the Astros had a secret center field camera stealing signs.

Mets manager Carlos Beltran, who played for the Astros in 2017, insists the Astros did nothing illegal but study video.

Red Sox manager Alex Cora, who was the bench coach on Houston manager A. J. Hinch’s staff, has publicly declined to comment.

MLB officials vow they will launch a major investigat­ion to get the truth.

“I think people have always been suspicious of different ways teams get signs,” Tigers GM Al Avila said. “I remember when Justin Verlander was pithcing for us, he was always very aware of things that might be going on. ( Former White Sox pitcher) Chris Sale got upset thinking guys were getting signs from center field. This stuff has been going on forever.

“All we want is a level playing field, that’s all. You can steal signs, but you can’t do it by electronic means. MLB has made that very clear.”

Said Yankees GM Brian Cashman: “I don’t think it’s a technologi­cal question as much as how you want to operate. You decide to play by the rules or you don’t. And if you don’t, there’s consequenc­es. You’re putting yourself at risk whether it’s future employment, current employment or sanctions or what have you.”

It’s unknown whether MLB will find the Astros guilty of using electronic equipment to steal signs, but the allegation­s alone has the baseball world furious, with players from Yankees star Aaron Judge to Reds pitcher Kevin Gausman expressing their disgust.

“The Astros thing is bad!!!” Gausman tweeted Thursday. “Guys lost jobs, got sent down, missed service time ( because) of how they were hit in HOU. Does anyone really think they only did this in 17?”

Just imagine if Darvish wasn’t crushed in the World Series. Would he have had to wait until February 2018 to sign a six- year, $ 126 million contract with the Cubs? How much money did it wind up costing him?

And even if the Astros receive the biggest punishment in baseball history, is it really going to stop teams from trying to cheat. There’s a reason players privately believe that performanc­e- enhancing drug use is on a rise, and the baseballs aren’t the only thing being juiced.

“Why are the pitch stealing allegation­s a surprise to anyone?” free agent infielder Trevor Plouffe tweeted. “Do you know the stakes involved? That’s why guys still get popped for PEDs. The reward outweighs the risk for many. That goes for organizati­ons and players.”

The best way to put a stop to it, once and for all, several general managers told USA TODAY Sports, is to simply eliminate signs, by using more technology.

If the NFL can send in plays to their quarterbac­ks using helmets with speakers, why can’t baseball have catching masks with audio or earpieces for pitchers?

At the very least, one NL GM said, why not follow the NFL rules and prohibit teams from having their own cameras throughout stadiums. The NFL permits only their own camera feeds.

“It would be a start for sure,” the GM said. “Right now, everywhere you go, there’s a center field camera feed pointed directly at the catcher. There’s really no reason for that but to steal signs.

“So if MLB takes over, every team would be prohibited from having any of their own cameras.

“Come on, we’ve got to do something, or no one is going to trust anyone anymore.”

 ?? JOE CAMPOREALE/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? General manager Jeff Luhnow and other Astros personnel will have to answer to MLB about allegation­s of sign stealing.
JOE CAMPOREALE/ USA TODAY SPORTS General manager Jeff Luhnow and other Astros personnel will have to answer to MLB about allegation­s of sign stealing.
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