Showing posts with label Jeff Luhnow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeff Luhnow. Show all posts

Saturday, February 6, 2021

Sunday Morning Hot Links

A few things upon which to catch up!

*The Astros took what I'm assuming is a good step towards extending Carlos Correa by settling with him on a contract for 2021 worth $11.7m (a little more than $500K over the midway point of their pre-arbitration gap), thus avoiding a Grisham-esque courtroom showdown involving the Astros telling their impending free agent superstar shortstop that he is not worth as much money as he thinks he is. Correa:

I'm happy that we were able to come to an agreement and avoid arbitration. Arbitration is not a good process. I want to thank James Click, Jim Crane and my agent, Jon Rosen, for getting the deal done. I'm ready to play and represent the Houston Astros.

And we are ready for Correa to play and represent the Houston Astros. Chandler Rome notes that Click and Correa have had talks regarding an extension, but wanted to get this year's deal out of the way first.

The Astros have about $13m of room before they hit the salary cap luxury tax.

*McTaggart says the Astros are clear 2021 AL West favorites. I read it, and I can't disagree.

*In case you missed it, Alex Bregman is jacked now

*Jeff Luhnow's lawsuit against the Astros has been settled for an undisclosed amount, bringing to an end the tenure of the most successful GM in franchise history.

*The Coward Mike Fiers is back with Oakland for 2021 on a 1yr/$3.5m deal.  Anyhow, Oakland opens the 2021 season with four home games against the Astros from April 1-4, then three games against the Dodgers from April 5-7, then three games in Houston from April 8-10. If the A's open with Fiers as SP5, he'd miss the opening series but then catch them on Saturday, April 10 in Houston. If I'm...whoever the manager of the A's is now then I'm throwing him in Oakland and letting Fiers avoid having to pitch in Houston. Because it would just be preposterous for one of your five starters to miss the first ten games of the season, especially when they occur within ten days. 

If we're talking Oakland, it's worth mentioning that Arlington and Oakland swung a trade exchanging Elvis Andrus (who committed two errors in the 7th Inning of Game 5 of the 2015 ALDS) and Khris Davis.

*Very Random: George Springer hit 174 home runs for the Astros. Now that he's gone, Jose Altuve needs 56 home runs, Correa needs 68, Bregman needs 70 to pass him. Just making sure that you saw Richard Justice's piece on George Springer in Texas Monthly.

*New minor-league OF Steven Dinesh D' Souza is a Tyler Bauer apologist who GOES ALL IN on the replies. Never go all in on the replies.

*Houston Chronicle: The sons of Former Astros Greats Roger Clemens and Mike Capel - Kacy Clemens and Conner Capel - were cleared of wrongdoing and awarded $3.24m in damages related to a bar fight at Concrete Cowboy over two years ago.

*It's almost a week old by now but it took me two separate attempts to get through the gut-wrenching Jeff Passan story on Drew Robinson

*Former Astros Great Mike Foltynewicz has signed a deal with the North Waxahachie Rangers.

*Another Baseball Bro resigned for treating women horribly.

*I got a couple of birthday books: The Hike, by Drew Magary; and The Revisionaries, by A.R. Moxon and I am very excited to start them both.

*A new theory on the Dyatlov Pass Incident.

*A Musical Selection:

Saturday, January 16, 2021

Saturday Morning Hot Links

Been a while, yeah? Because nothing - Astros-wise, anyway - is happening. Well that changed a little bit yesterday. A shame, really, I had gotten used to not having to think about the Astros.

*The deadline to settle arbitration cases was yesterday and the Astros could not come to an agreement with Carlos Correa, and so they will head to a hearing. Correa wanted $12.5m, the Astros offered $9.75m. That's quite a gap. 

I do not understand this decision. Let's recap what has happened since October 2019:

1. Brandon Taubman popped off at some reporters about domestic violence, getting himself fired in the process.

2. The Astros lost every home game of the World Series.

3. The Mike Fiers story dropped, which resulted in Luhnow and Hinch getting fired and the Astros becoming the most hated single team in Baseball since 1919. 

4. COVID-19. 

And through all of that, Correa became the face of the franchise, standing up for his teammates and bearing that burden to the public, allowing guys like Altuve and Bregman to sit back in the shadows (as much as that is possible, anyway). And you can't come up with the extra $2.75m to pay him? He is going to be a free agent at the end of the 2021 season, you think maybe, if you want a little goodwill in the negotiations with the best shortstop in franchise history?

*FanGraphs' WAR, Astros shortstops:

1. Correa: 19.4

2. Dickie MF Thon: 14.3

3. Adam Everett: 9.2

In 45 fewer games than the man largely considered to be the best defensive shortstop in franchise history, Correa has put up 10.2 more fWAR. Since he came into the league in 2015 - even given the injury-shortened seasons - Correa has the 5th most fWAR among shortstops, in more than 150 fewer games than three of the four players ahead of him. I know baseball economics are allegedly what they are in a pandemic/post-pandemic scenario, but it's also important to never believe a billionaire when they cry poor. I could have stopped that sentence after "billionaire." And so, now, approximately ten months before he's set to become a free agent in his Age 26 season, the Astros will go before a panel and tell Correa that he's not worth as much as he thinks he is. Seems real smart. Click:

We have nothing but the utmost respect for Carlos and his group. Again, I can't emphasize this enough: I think they came very well prepared and I think we were very well prepared, but we just see different things in the market and that's why the system is there to help us resolve those.

*In the last couple of weeks, the Astros have added veterans Ryne Sandberg Stanek and Pedro Baez to the bullpen. The back four of the bullpen will be Stanek, Baez, Joe Smith, and Ryan Pressly. Click that link and McTaggart will tell you the Astros are engaged on Brad Hand, Alex Colome, and Trevor Rosenthal. So obviously, the Astros are trying to shore up their bullpen and will just get to the 2/3 of the outfield that is apparently missing, exiled to Weiland Island. Click, on Springer/Brantley:

Those two guys are very special to this franchise and we will continue to have conversations, but we're, like I've said, gonna go where the market dictates sometimes, and something we are gonna push the market and make it come to us.

This is an excellent example of saying something and it's full of nothing at all.

To be fair, Click did say that they have discussed an extension with Correa. The Astros did avoid an arbitration hearing with Aledmys Diaz ($3m) and Lance McCullers ($6.5m). 

*ESPN is predicting Springer to the Blue Jays.

*I totally missed the rumor that the Astros are interested in Joakim Soria, who at this point just must be 52 years old.

*Houston signed 22-year old Cuban OF Pedro Leon to a $4m signing bonus, in a long-rumored move. Click:

He's a special talent. He has all five tools, and a sixth one if you count just how good he is at the game of baseball from an instincts perspective - tremendous off-field guy. There's just not enough good things that we can say about him.

Click said how quickly he rises through the system depends on Leon, but they're not planning on him immediately replacing Brantley or Springer. 

*The Tri-City ValleyCats, formerly of the historic New York-Penn League, have sued the Astros for lost revenue over the minor-league contraction/restructuring that got rammed through by Soulless Ghoul Rob Manfred (for a non-paywalled link, click here). The complaint:

MLB's intimidation tactics, which it used to pit MiLB teams against each other for the 'privilege' of not having their businesses destroyed, has gone on for years but was most vividly demonstrated by a May 2020 email in which Commissioner Rob Manfred emailed the ValleyCats' owner condolences on the passing of his father, and then in the very same email, issued a veiled threat that any public statement made about MLB's contraction efforts would be 'unwise.'

MLB is arguing that it wasn't really a threat, and there's nuance that is missing. Actively trying to remember why I even care about this sport. 

*Former Astros Great Jeff Luhnow is working with the group that brought you "Club de Cuervos" on Netflix to buy a Liga MX team.

*Leeds vs. Brighton: 9am. NBCSN.

*Minute Maid Park will host a vaccination drive today.

*Mental Floss: The Harvard Chemistry Professor Who Was Also A Murderer.

*Food & Wine: Ted Cruz's love for soup knows no bounds.

*Outside: Journey to the Center of the Earth.

*I've been a little busy over at Michael Bourn Identity, featuring interviews with musician Joe Firstman, Centro-Matic's Will Johnson and Fenway Park's Josh Kantor, and Hall of Fame play-by-play man Eric Nadel.

*A Musical Selection:

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Tuesday Morning Hot Links

*The biggest Astros news of the day was that Former Astros Great Jeff Luhnow has sued the Houston Astros in Harris County District Court for $22m for a breach of contract, alleging that his firing was negotiated between Jim Crane and Rob Manfred. ESPN:

Luhnow's attorneys wrote in the filing that the agreement between Crane and Manfred 'scapegoated Luhnow for a sign-stealing scandal that he had no knowledge of and played no part in.'

Luhnow wants a jury trial and hoooooboy would that be something. Just from a "burn it all down" perspective I want this to happen.

In the filing we find Luhnow's lawyers alleging that Tom Koch-Weser, the Astros' director of advance information and the "Dark Arts/Codebreaker" guy, was told by the Astros that he could keep his job as long as he implicated Luhnow. 

Brian T. Smith: The lawsuit adds more tarnish to the once-golden Astros era.

David Barron says not to expect some grand John Grisham-esque courtroom drama - it'll likely play out in a closed-door arbitration case.

*Kyle Lewis was the unanimous 2020 AL Rookie of the Year. He hit .262/.364/.437 for the Mariners in 58 games. Ten of those games were against Houston, Lewis hit .303/.439/.485 with 2HR and 5RBI, both of which feels low by about 20. Cristian Javier finished 3rd.

*Ken Rosenthal is reporting that the Astros are trying to work out a deal with Michael Brantley.

*Houston has checked in on Jackie Bradley, Jr. 

*At least ten teams - of which the Astros may or may not be one - have expressed interest in Charlie F. Morton, who is leaning towards a 1yr deal with an option for a 2nd.

*Toronto has expressed interest in George Springer. I have expressed interest in Indian food for lunch today.

*Tony LaRussa was charged with a DUI the day before the White Sox hired him, if you want to know how that's going. And the White Sox knew, and hired him anyway.

*The Athletic's Eno Sarris: Your favorite pitcher is probably cheating.

*A Musical Selection:

Friday, October 23, 2020

Friday Morning Hot Links

*This run of exhibition games at Choad Life Park saw an empty stadium last night, as though "taking a day off" is something that happens in baseball in 2020. It's 1-1 and the off-season barnstorming tour continues tonight.

*Brent Strom talked to Mark Berman about coming back in 2021, Correa, and Dusty, and the stable of pitchers the Astros have. It's a really good interview.

*Gold Glove finalists were released yesterday and Carlos Correa, Yuli Gurriel, and Kyle Tucker are on the list.

*Check McTaggart's Mailbox, on Houston's 2021 outfield options, Osuna, Correa, etc.

*Took a little longer than I expected, but there's a response to Luhnow's Monday Night Interview. The Athletic's Evan Drellich:

People with knowledge of the investigation said that 'there was direct testimony that Luhnow was aware of the sign-stealing scheme.' The league's department of investigations, headed by former federal prosecutors, gathered a combination of direct evidence, circumstantial evidence and testimony that a source said would hold up in a legal forum, despite Luhnow's suggestion to the contrary. 'Luhnow received emails that put him on notice of the activity, but claims he only read parts of the emails even though he responded to the emails,' the person said. 'One witness clearly stated and provided evidence that Luhnow know, and others identified facts indicating that Luhnow knew. The best interpretation of the evidence is that Luhnow either knew exactly what the video room was doing, or knew generally what they were doing and willfully chose to keep himself in the dark.

It's not out of the realm of possibility that you could find someone in MLB's New York office who has committed themselves to burying Luhnow and the Astros at every opportunity. It's also not out of the realm of possibility that the Astros did something wrong and answered MLB's questions far more whole-heartedly than any other team had/has answered them, and they have paid more dearly than any of them. [Ed. Note: I have downloaded Ben Reiter's podcast The Edge, but have not yet listened to it, something I plan on remedying today. Ben Reiter wrote Astroball, so there's reason to believe that what he has to say is worthwhile.]

Apparently I missed that Rob Manfred responded to the Luhnow interview on Tuesday. I have grown weary of this. Manfred:

Whether he exactly knew what was going on or not is really beside the point. I wrote to all the GMs. I put them on notice that it was their obligation to make sure that their organizations were not violating any of the sign-stealing rules...He damaged the game, and as a result, he was disciplined.

This is utterly exhausting. And I'm just a fan. It's a fair question to ask, Why did the Red Sox do the Apple Watch stuff AND the video room stuff and only the film room guy get re-assigned for a year, while the Astros got the worst penalty in sports since SMU? Because MLB likes to do their killin' before breakfast, they're keeping a not-small amount of the findings of their investigation private. Other teams saw what happened to the Astros and shut the hell up. I've just sort of come to terms with the idea that this is/was a league-wide problem, and Manfred decided to let everyone think that it was an Astros-only problem (in the same way that the Mitchell Report scapegoated teams on the coasts). The noisiest opponents have been the Yankees, Dodgers, and Indians, for what it's worth. 

*Mookie Betts or Mike Trout?

*Wired: The case for reviving the Civilian Conservation Corps.

*Ken Paxton fired two of the whistleblowers who accused him of using his office to help out a donor. 

*At least everything is awful. 

*Vice: How a secretive phone company helped the crime world go dark.

*The Ringer: The heartbreaking story behind the Gin Blossoms' "Hey Jealousy."

*A Musical Selection:

Monday, October 19, 2020

Tuesday Morning Hot Links

 *After two days of reflection, this is where I am:

1. Absolutely amazing the Astros got as far as they did without Verlander, Yordan, and Osuna. 

2. Absolutely infuriating that the largely-intact lineup couldn't come up with a few more hits in Games 1-3. 

3. The emergence of Framber Valdez, Cristian Javier, Enoli Paredes, Blake Taylor, and Andre Scrubb makes 2020 a success no matter the ALCS outcome. 

4. I still love Charlie Morton.

5. I told you I was terrified of the Rays. 

6. I do not care who wins the World Series, despite my text to my cousins on Saturday night that "I would rather the world end than see the Dodgers win a World Series." I was acting out. 

*At a press conference, GM James Click said that Altuve's struggles in 2020, and his sudden difficulty throwing the ball to first base, were but a blip:

I was really impressed by the fact that he didn't take that with him to the plate and he didn't let that affect the rest of his game. We are 100 percent confident that those blips are behind him. He is going to come back next year, I'm sure, as the elite offensive and defensive player that we know he is.

*Remember when Zack Greinke said after Game 4 that it was nice to have someone (Dusty) believe in him? Greinke and James Click had a talk about that. Click:

We had a long conversation. It was great. It was a very healthy conversation. He expressed his views and why he made the comments and I mostly listened. My job in that situation was I think just to listen to a Hall of Famer and find out why he would be frustrated by those kind of things.

*The entire coaching staff is coming back for 2021.

*This Martin Maldonado coming-home video will melt your heart.

*This Tim Brown piece says something along the lines of "The Astros' past caught up with them in Game 7 and that's why they lost."

*Check out MLBTR's projected arbitration salaries for next month.

*It's not terribly fun to read about, but we all love Geoff Blum so whatever: When utilityman Geoff Blum became a World Series hero.

*Former Astros Great Chris Holt is the leading candidate to take over as Baltimore's pitching coach. Former Astros Great Jim Hickey is the new Nationals' pitching coach.

*According to Mark Berman, Jeff Luhnow and [squints] A-Rod approached the Dynamo about purchasing the franchise, but nothing came of it. 

*Luhnow spoke to KPRC about the sign-stealing scandal, because what is another early postseason exit without getting a chance to experience pain, past or present? I have many thoughts, and I'm going to work through them, and we'll convene tomorrow, yeah?

*Leeds United 0 - Wolves 1. Leeds are at 18% to get relegated, according to FiveThirtyEight. It is unhealthy how often I check this. Next up: Aston Villa on Friday at 2pm Central.

*10 Psychological Haunted House movies - for when the ghost might be you.

*I voted last Tuesday. It took 45 minutes, longer than I've ever waited to vote. Pro Publica: Why do non-white voters in Georgia have to wait for hours? 

*I'm not much on Maureen Dowd, but I really like Sacha Baron Cohen.

*You'd think that no one would be stupid enough to hire a hitman on a website called "Rent a Hitman." You'd be wrong.

*A Musical Selection:

Thursday, October 15, 2020

Thursday Morning Hot Links

The Astros finally got a hit with a runner in scoring position that actually scored a run and managed to hold on for a 4-3 win in Game 4. The season lives to see another day. Springer, Correa, Altuve, Bregman, and Gurriel played in their 54th postseason game together - the most by any five teammates all time. Game 5 is at 4:07pm Central on TBS. 

*FanGraphs still has it 87.3-12.7 Rays. It's 90-10 Rays at FiveThirtyEight. I'm not so sure... Dusty:

Nobody's ready to go home. I'm not ready to go home. Nobody's ready to go home. We're ready to go to Dallas. We're still one step closer to the top of that mountain, but we got a couple steep cliffs the next couple days.

As of right now we don't know who's pitching for the Astros in Game 5.

*Jose Altuve: 2x4, HR, 2RBI. 100% successful throws to the bag. Altuve has homered in five of his last six postseason games (ALCS Game 2). Altuve, 2020 Postseason: .333/.447/.744, 5HR/10RBI. He now has 73 postseason hits, passing Roberto Alomar for most all-time by a 2B in postseason history.

*George Springer: 3x4, HR, 2RBI. They were his first RsBI since ALDS Game 2. Springer, prior to Game 4:

Just go out and play as hard as you possibly can. Go leave everything out there. Don't leave any doubt. If there's a play that you think you have to dive, dive...Your backs are up against the wall. And you got to grind and fight, and the end of the day, whatever happens happens.

Springer and Altuve have now homered in the same postseason game four times. The only other duo to hit a home run in more games is Springer and Correa (7).

Astros Postseason HR Leaderboard:

1. Altuve/Springer: 18

3. Correa: 16

4. Bregman: 11

5. Beltran: 8

6. Berkman: 6

Springer and Altuve's 18 postseason home runs are tied for 5th on the all-time leaderboard. Springer:

Sometimes it's frustrating to hit the ball hard in general and have a guy be there. But you know what? That's the game. I got to do better at kind of not showing a lot of frustration because it really is part of the game. You know, sometimes I'm going to get jammed and I'm going to sneak it in there, and there's other times we're going to hit one hard and be out. It kind of is what it is, and I'm happy to help us today.

*Zack Greinke: 6IP, 5H/2ER, 7K:1BB. More importantly, Greinke got himself out of a jam in the 6th Inning, a move that did not happen in Game 7 of the 2019 World Series. It was Greinke's first postseason Win since 2015 NLDS Game 2, when he was with the Dodgers. Greinke:

It was nice having someone have confidence in me because since I've been here they haven't seemed to have confidence in my ability. It was nice having that happen in an important time like that. 

Dusty, on leaving Greinke in:

I can't lie to you. There were some prayers involved on the way back to the dugout.

Zack Greinke has made 30 (regular and postseason) starts for the Astros. He has gotten 18 outs in 17 of them. Greinke, on Dusty trusting his gut

I would say he is really, really good at that. I've been impressed. He reads people really good, and I don't think I've ever seen him make a wrong decision. When he trusts what he sees, he sees the right thing almost 100 percent of the time.

Kevin Cash, on Greinke:

Greinke really, really pitched. He has a really good changeup. The changeup and the little cut fastball that he throws, there's not a ton of velo separation there, but there's a lot of depth separation. We got chasing on the changeup and the front-door cutters that he was throwing, cut fastballs to the righties, it looked like he was just painting, wherever he wanted to.

*Cristian Javier is the Astros' secret weapon.

*Tyler Glasnow: 6IP, 8H/4ER, 5K:2BB.

Glasnow, postseason, against Not Houston: 13.1IP, 9H/6ER, 20K:6BB. 4.05 ERA / 1.13 WHIP.

Glasnow, postseason, against Only Houston: 13IP, 17H/10ER, 13K:5BB. 6.92 ERA / 1.69 WHIP.

*McTaggart: Bregman's ready to put the Loud Outs behind him.

*Is Jeff Luhnow an option for the Angels' GM search?

*Sam Miller: Ranking the trades that got the Final Four to where they are.

*The Guardian: Author Bill Bryson says he's retiring. I would highly recommend you read "A Walk in the Woods," "Notes From A Small Island," and "One Summer: America, 1927."

*Will Leitch: Jeff Tweedy can't wait to write his next song.

*Mental Floss: Nine books that predicted the future.

*A Musical Selection:


Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Wednesday Morning Hot Links

The Astros split a double-header yesterday against the Angels. Houston is 17-14. The season is 51.6% of the way over. The Astros' scheduled game today has been postponed to a double-header in September. There is also no game on Thursday, because they played that one yesterday. Please everyone take the precautions you need to today.

Game 1:

Houston put up a 5-spot in the 1st Inning and sailed to a 6-3 win. Cristian Javier had a no-hitter in the 5th, which in these uncertain times is the equivalent of taking a no-hitter into the 16th Inning wait that's the Bad Math. Former All-Star Jason Castro broke it up like a punk.

Javier: 5.2IP, 3H/3ER, 5K:2BB. Javier:

I felt good out there. I felt my pitches were falling when I needed them to be, and I felt I made good adjustments as the game went along.

Dusty, on the game:

We've been getting the large crooked number in an inning, but we've got to add on from there, because they were still within three runs...We've got to get better at the add-on runs and put them away. Just right now, it doesn't seem like we have the killer instinct to really put them away, but we'll get it. 

James Click gonna add a literal serial killer to the team in the next five days.

Jack Mayfield: 1x3, 2RBI

Jose Altuve: 1x2, 2BB. It's his 3rd 2BB game of the season.

Game 2:

Yeesh. Hey, look at that shiny object! Brandon Bielak couldn't get out of the 1st inning, the Astros turned a 6-0 deficit into a 6-4 one in the 5th inning, but the Angels scored six of the next seven runs for a 12-5 win. Houston pitchers walked ten batters in Game 2. Unfortunately, the Astros lose 15-11 on aggregate and have been eliminated from the Champions League. 

Brandon Bielak's 1st five appearances: 21.1IP, 13H/4ER, 15K:11BB, 2HR

Brandon Bielak's last two appearances: 2IP, 8H/11ER, 2K:4BB, 4HR. Jessica Biel > Brandon Bielak.

Dusty, on Bielak:

We have to cut down on our bases on balls. It's a lot more pitches and the defense isn't as sharp. It's a total negative all the way around. We've just got to throw more strikes, but that's what you get with young guys. Young guys, they would have been here a long time ago had they thrown strikes. You kind of have to live with it right now until we get all our guys back. 

That is a brutal, brutal quote. 

Joe BBiagini: 0.2IP, 3H/4ER, 0K:2BB. 

BBiagini has faced 27 batters in 2020: 13 outs, 10 hits (four doubles, one homer), 4 walks.

Yuli and Kyle Tucker each had two hits. Kyle Tucker is 12x24 with eight extra-base hits and 2K:7BB since August 19. He has five triples in 31 games. It's happening. Maybe.

Blake Taylor appeared in both games, the first Astros pitcher to pitch in two games in the same day since Michael Feliz did it after Hurricane Harvey's double-header against the Mets.

Chase De Jong became the first Astro to wear #69. The weed number.

*FanGraphs has the Astros finishing the season 33-27, 2nd in the AL West (three-ish games behind Oakland), and a 97.1% chance of making the playoffs, with a 6.8% chance of winning the World Series.

*George Springer didn't bat in either game, giving him three days off before the Astros allegedly go to Oakland on Friday.

*The Astros' alternate site in Corpus reopened after a positive COVID test last week.

*I made a list of actually helpful Twitter accounts giving out actually helpful information related to Hurricane Laura. It's gonna be a rough few days and weeks. 

*The Astros had scouts in Sugar Land last night to watch Former Astros Great Scott Kazmir.

*A-Rod and Former Astros Great Jeff Luhnow have been in contact as Former Rangers Great Alex Rodriguez is looking to buy the Mets and apparently McKinsey them right up.

*The Athletic: The ball is different, again.

*Smithsonian Magazine: The inside story of the $8 million heist from the Carnegie Library.

*Boston Globe: This math problem stumped experts for 50 years. A grad student from Maine solved it in days. Next ask him how the 2019 Astros lost every damn home game in the World Series.

*I know it sounds silly to say, "Be careful! everyone in Southeast Texas/Southwest Louisiana!" like you're not already being as careful as you can. But it makes me feel better to say, "Be Careful!" Please do as I say.

*A Musical Selection:

Thursday, April 2, 2020

'Rona-Free Hot Links, Vol. 5

IMPORTANT: If you are in a Zoom Meeting with more than two people, and do not mute your mic, you will be brought before a war crimes tribunal.

*I know these are supposed to be COVID-19-free, but here's how the Astros Foundation is helping to coordinate and deliver medical supplies.

*Chandler Rome has a mailbag. He talks about impending free agency, three prospects he thinks will throw 90+ IP in 2020/2021, whichever comes first, Forrest Whitley, and A.J. Hinch.

*Speaking of A.J. Hinch, Buster Olney reported (confirmed by Chandler Rome) that, if the 2020 season is canceled, Hinch and Jeff Luhnow would still be eligible to return to baseball in 2021. This is consistent with MLB's decision on player suspensions not having to spill over to 2021 (Francis Martes, for instance).



*Here are the draft pools and slot bonuses for the 1st 10 Rounds of the 2020 Draft, though how many rounds there actually will be is still up in the air. The Astros' 1st selection of the Draft will be #73, thanks to the Yankees giving Gerrit Cole over $300m. That pick has a slot of $857,400. Their next pick will be 3-102.

*Listen to Part 2 of Evan Gattis' conversation with The Athletic on the Astros' sign-stealing in 2017. Gattis:
I think we got so f***ing caught up that we f***ed up.

*Jon Singleton was the most-hyped Astros' 1B prospect of the last 20 years, says MLB.com. I think I was more hyped for Brett Wallace, but the point stands.

*Lance McCullers is Tags' pick for Future Ace of the Astros.

*Meet "the conscience of baseball."

*Chris Cwik went back and undid all of Jeter's wrongs with the Marlins.

*Tim Kurkjian: Ichiro's love of hamburgers, math, and his bats.

*Sam Miller: The most meme-worthy moments for all 29 teams (yeah, the trash can takes the cake for the Astros. If it's not Coronavirus, it's trash cans. This is what we are now.)

*Outside: The Woman Who Lives 200,000 Years In The Past.

*Explore.org has a ton of webcams for you to pass your time.

*You need Yoga With Adriene in your life.



*Learn Something:

Saturday, February 8, 2020

Saturday Morning Dark Arts Links

What a day.

*A.J. Hinch sat down with Tom Verducci in this MLB Network interview and answered some questions. I'm not going to transcribe the thing because (1) it's 18 minutes long and (2) you're perfectly capable of watching it yourself. But still, in the interest of Why Did A.J. Hinch Sit Down with Tom Verducci, let's get this opening salvo on record:

One, I still feel responsible and I'll always feel responsible because I was the man out front. I was the manager, the leader, I was the one in charge of the team. I put out a statement that day - it was a very emotional day for me and my family - to apologize. But there's something different about doing it on camera, and putting a face to an apology, and saying 'I'm sorry' to the League, to Baseball, to the fans, to the players, to the coaches. I was the man out front. And I felt like it's my responsibility to put my voice out there and tell a little bit of the story to hopefully start the next step, which is getting past this and getting into the best part of baseball, which is the players and the game. 

Some takeaways:

1. Jim Crane met with Hinch in person and fired him. At least it wasn't via text or email, and at least TMZ didn't break it before Hinch knew.
2. Hinch confirmed he did break the monitors twice with a bat to signal his displeasure with the scandal. He wished he would have had a meeting. Hinch's line: "I tolerated too much."
3. Hinch heard the trash can banging.
4. Hinch never talked with Luhnow about, or saw, the memo that Manfred sent to all the GMs on September 15, 2017 saying not to misuse technology in stealing signs. "It doesn't mean that it was right to do what we did." The underlying argument here is that Luhnow got the memo, didn't take it downstairs to Hinch, and Hinch didn't know the memo got circulated to the GMs. Aha! But MLB did release the memo, so that's not quite true.
5. Hinch wished Fiers had come to him "in real time" to discuss his opposition to the trash-can banging, and wishes he "had a better environment" for Fiers to discuss his issues.
6. We need to be clear about how A.J. Hinch handled [waves hands] all this in real time. When he said that allegations - from Game 1 - regarding whistling were "a joke," and "laughable," Hinch explained that he was talking about 2019...not 2017.
7. Verducci asked Hinch about the Astros wearing buzzers to signal the pitch, specifically asking Hinch to assure viewers that it wasn't the case. Hinch very well could have come out and said, "No, they weren't wearing buzzers." Instead, he deferred to the thoroughness of the MLB investigation and that they didn't come up with anything. It's hardly a "No." But anyone watching this - Astros Fan or Astros Enemy - is going to read into that what they will. Really wish Verducci had pushed a little harder here. It's hard to imagine that Hinch wouldn't have known if they were, in fact, wearing buzzers.
8. Hinch's overall demeanor indicated, to me (a not-psychologist), regret. Regret that it happened and not so much that he got caught. He could have stopped it and he didn't - at least as forcefully as he now knows he should have, and he knows all of this. Today we also learned that A.J. Hinch took the fall for the organization. Luhnow caught the same punishment, and we'll get to that in a minute, but Hinch didn't throw anyone under the bus. He took the punishment because (and this is understandable) he was the manager. That's pretty much it. I love A.J. Hinch. I'll miss him. But he messed up.
9. Hinch was a Player's Manager, he's still the Astros Fan's Manager.

*Then Jared Diamond comes in with an article - about 45 minutes before Hinch's interview dropped - in the Wall Street Journal saying that Luhnow had complete and utter knowledge of what was happening in the front office, and so did some members of the front office. It's insane. If you don't have a subscription (I don't), it's worth signing up for a trial or paying for a month (I did, it's $1 for four weeks). Diamond's article includes "previously undisclosed information about the origins and nature of the Astros' cheating" from a letter Manfred sent to Luhnow on January 2, "as well as interviews with several people familiar with the matter." Good sleuthing, Robbie. There are a lot of people to blame. Let's look at each one, and determine how complicit they are:

Derek Vigoa, Former Intern and Now Senior Director of Team Operations: "On Sept 22, 2016, an intern in the Houston Astros organization showed general manager Jeff Luhnow a PowerPoint presentation that featured the latest creation by the team's high-tech front office: an Excel-based application programmed with an algorithm that could decode the opposing catcher's signs. It was called 'Codebreaker.'"

Pretty classic to start with a Rogue Intern, but whatever. Ivy League Bros are pretty much all the same. Eager to break some conventional norms in order to impress the uber Ivy League Bro. No one has a Favorite Company, so this is all new to us, but the hierarchy is universal.

Diamond:
The existence of Codebreaker shows that it was the Astros front office that laid the groundwork for the team's electronic sign-stealing schemes.

Jeff Luhnow, General Manager: Manfred wrote to Luhnow on Jan 2, "There is more than sufficient evidence to support a conclusion that you knew - and overwhelming evidence that you should have known - that the Astros maintained a sign-stealing program that violated MLB's rules."

Luhnow, according to Diamond, responded with a 170-page binder that was enough of a muckin-up-the-works to "cast at least some doubt" on Manfred's letter. Those familiar said it turned into a he-said-he-said between Luhnow and...

Tom Koch-Weser, Director of Advance Information: Sent two emails to Luhnow referencing "the system" and "our dark arts, sign-stealing department." Weser was essentially demoted after the 2019 season, but before The Athletic published the Fiers story. MLB couldn't figure out who was telling the truth: Luhnow, or Koch-Weser. Neither responded for comment.

The 2017 Astros: Diamond says the trash-can scheme lasted through the 2017 World Series and expanded to 2018 both at Minute Maid Park, and on the Road. This is Different Information.

Luhnow remembered the PowerPoint, according to investigators, and asked questions, but told said investigators that he assumed it would be used legally, using previously-gained knowledge and not in-game sign-stealing. Vioga assumed Luhnow knew it would be used in-game because that's "where the value would be."

Koch-Weser said he discussed Codebreaker with Luhnow on 1-3 occasions, noting that Luhnow would "giggle" and "was excited," referring to Codebreaker by name. It's not a good look. Luhnow denied all of this.

Matt Hogan, Manager of Pro Scouting Analysis: Told investigators there was no effort to hide Codebreaker when Luhnow visited the video room. Luhnow denied this.

Koch-Weser felt his oats so much that he used the term "dark arts" in negotiations around a contract extension. Diamond, quoting a Slack post: "I know the secrets that made us a championship team, some of which [he'd] definitely feel a lot safer if they were kept in house." Luhnow denied this. In Koch-Weser's budget spreadsheet, there was a tab called "Dark Arts." Luhnow said he saw the spreadsheet but no discussion of the "Dark Arts" took place. Regardless, it's pretty clear that Koch-Weser was trying to use his work to justify his extension. There were emails between Luhnow and Koch-Weser which Luhnow said he didn't read because they were (a) long, and (b) he didn't know what "the system" meant. Luhnow responded with a question asking how much Hinch knew.

Koch-Weser uses the phrase "Dark Arts" too much. Way too much. I didn't read the first Harry Potter book until I was in my mid-20s and, yes, they were fun to read, but I didn't identify as Hufflepuff or whatever because I was an Adult, instead. It's weird. This section is not designed to cast doubt or skepticism on Koch-Weser's part but, come on read some Kerouac or Steinbeck or something.

By August 2017, Koch-Weser notes that the offense has been less effective as "the league has become aware of our reputation and now most clubs change their signs a dozen times per game." Emails went back-and-forth with Luhnow praising Koch-Weser's reports but also Luhnow told investigators that the email was too long so he didn't read the whole thing, and any mention of "Dark Arts" seemed "nefarious."

MLB didn't believe Luhnow. That's that. Everyone else is to blame. Deny everything and stay afloat. That seems to be the standard. But this seemingly indicates that it perhaps wasn't solely "player-driven?"

Maybe the Hinch and Luhnow stories are related, maybe they're not. But A.J. Hinch sat down with Tom Verducci and gave - not an explanation, but a rationale for bad judgment. Luhnow...hasn't said a word. No one has. They've circled the wagons, and that's just how it is.

All in all, this is good reporting by Jared Diamond. No one looks good here. It's going to solidify the opinion of the Astros, whatever that may be.

*Hardball Talk's Nick Stellini:
Baseball deliberately shielded everyone in the Astros' front office besides Jeff Luhnow. Rob Manfred needs to tell us why.

*Dodgers Fan and Writer Howard Cole says Hinch performed "badly." Cole:
For weeks, current and former Astros sign stealing participants have walked right up to the line of an apology, but not actually apologize. Not really. Not to my satisfaction.

Well guess what? There will never be an act of contrition that is good enough for anybody.

*Daily Fantasy players are suing MLB over the sign-stealing.

*Tim Brown said Hinch's apology is a start. And speaking of Tim Brown, his "think-piece" regarding James Click is one of the worst columns I've ever read.

*Ten Reasons Why This Was The Wildest Off-Season in MLB History.

*Meet the woman who made Netflix get rid of its most annoying feature.

*A Musial Selection:


Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Suspension Reaction Roundup

A friendly gathering of what I'm sure will be a universally even-keeled response to the punishments handed down by MLB yesterday:

*Check out our own Masked Marvel on Manfred painting himself into a corner.

*Jake Kaplan: After cleaning house, where will Jim Crane turn?

*538's Travis Sawchik: How much of the Astros' legacy is now in doubt?

*ESPN has a list of player reactions to yesterday's news.

*ESPN's Buster Olney (unlocked): The five victims of the Astros' sign-stealing scandal.

*ESPN's Jeff Passan: Why anger is boiling behind the scenes about the Astros punishments. An anonymous team president:
Crane won. The entire thing was programmed to protect the future of the franchise. He got his championship. He keeps his team. His fine is nothing. The sport lost, but Crane won.

*FanGraphs' Jay Jaffe: Manfred hammers the Astros.

*SI's Emma Baccellieri: Unpacking the meaning of Manfred's punishment.

*Stephanie Apstein: MLB, not the Astros, should have fired Hinch and Luhnow.

*Tom Verducci: Firing Luhnow/Hinch was the only option Crane had.

*Bradford Doolittle, David Schoenfield, and Jeff Passan broke down what the penalties actually mean.

*Chandler Rome: Manfred went after the Astros' "insular culture."

*Jerome Solomon: Jim Crane's firings set the bar higher for the organization.

*USA Today's Bob Nightengale: The Astros are still talented, but are leaderless and flawed.

*SI legal guy Michael McCann: Could Hinch or Luhnow sue the Astros and/or MLB?

*The Athletic's Ken Rosenthal: People at every level of baseball are responsible for the sign-stealing mess. Rosenthal:
The penalties administered by Manfred...will serve as a powerful deterrent to anyone who considers engaging in illegal sign stealing in the future. But baseball still must figure out exactly how to best prevent such violations from occurring again, whether it's by denying players access to video during games, introducing new technology to protect the relaying of signs from catcher to pitcher or developing some other innovative strategy. And everyone involved needs to acknowledge the role they played in allowing the sport to grow so out of control.






*SI: Baseball's cheating culture is facing a reckoning.

*Yahoo's Tim Brown: The 'High-Road' won't win Houston's opponents any glory.






*Baseball America's J.J. Cooper: How the draft situation will be resolved over the next two years.

*MLB.com's Jonathan Mayo: The cost of the lost prospect value in 2020 and 2021.

*Boston's Dan Shaugnessy: The Red Sox need to do the right thing and fire Alex Cora.

Hinch the fall-guy as Manfred paints himself into a corner.

Some quick, random thoughts about the Astros punishments handed down earlier today.  Of course, AC already covered this in detail.

A.J. Hinch is the fall guy:  Despite disapproving of the scheme, and damaging the video monitor twice, and being cleared of being the creative genius behind the scheme, A.J. Hinch copped the same suspension as Jeff Luhnow.  It seems that this was a predetermined decision - as clipped from MLB's nine page summary:


It seems that when the Red Sox got busted in 2017, Rob Manfred decided to ensure that management and front office staff would be part of the punishment, presumably mostly as a deterrent to other clubs.  I would think this would stem from the fallout of the Steroid Era - MLB was well criticised at the time in punishing the players, and letting the executives and field staff (who were either aware, or in some cases, assisted the players in using PEDs) off without punishment.  This angered the MLB Players Association, and I am sure that the decision in this case was made partly to appease the MLBPA.

The main counter-argument to this is that Hinch knowingly lied or misdirected people when the Yankees accused them of whistling in the dugout.  My memory of this is that Hinch discredited this for the 2019 playoffs, but it may have been that his comments could have been interpreted as dismissing the entire concept of noise notifications ever having existed with the Astros.  I haven't researched this, but it is possible that someone explores this angle shortly.

Allowing Hinch to serve a one-year suspension, then return to manage the Astros in 2021 would have created an untenable situation for the Astros, especially for whomever is appointed to manage the team in 2020.  So A.J. Hinch is fired.  His failure was one of leadership, but I think he wears the punishment disproportionally in this case.  I feel for the guy - he seemed like a really calm, collected, reasonable manager who made a lot of good, sensible decisions.  The Astros will miss him.

Jeff Luhnow:  The Commish, in his summary, confused the issue in my opinion.  He (i) imposed the same penalty on  Luhnow and Hinch then (ii) made a point of stating that Luhnow, in his opinion, has been unethical in his running of the Front Office for a bunch of other reasons.  He specifically mentioned the following...

... terrible place for a page break...

On top of all of that, Manfred's summary indicated that he thought Jeff Luhnow was not entirely truthful about his knowledge of the scheme, noting the following:

And yet, Jeff Luhnow gets the same penalty as A.J. Hinch despite (i) likely underplaying his knowledge of the scheme, and (ii) running a front office that treated its employees and everyone else associated with the game like crap.  I would have thought that this may have drawn a longer suspension.  Or perhaps Rob Manfred knew that Jeff Luhnow would get fired...

Jim Crane is blameless:  Of course he is.  The summary of the report says that about 60 times.  Plus, he (and 29 others) employs the Commissioner of Baseball.  It becomes a massive headache for baseball if the Astros ownership is also implicated.

I am not saying the Jim Crane knew about the scheme, of course.  I am perhaps just a little sceptical in a "the Lady doth protest too much, methinks" kind of way.  Preserving ownership and firing the GM and Manager does not involve serious headaches and forced multi-billion dollar transactions, so even if Jim Crane was the one holding the theragun against the trash can in Game 5 of the World Series, I am not sure the report would have said that.

I have overstated my position of this to make a point, but allowing Jim Crane to clear house in an effort to move on is probably the best way forward for everyone.

We can move on!!  It has been a frighteningly quiet offseason for the Astros.  There has been no free-agent chatter in relation to the Astros this year, and we can probably thank the Grienke trade for hamstringing the club for this upcoming season for the lack of chatter.  But it is also possible that potential FA's want no part of the pox-infested Astros.

The penalties pound the Astros:  These are harsh penalties.  Regardless of how psychopathic you may think Jeff Luhnow is, he is clearly one of the smartest and sharpest executives in the game.  And A.J. Hinch is one of the top few managers in the game too.  The Astros will be without them going forward, which was really the only realistic thing that Jim Crane could do.  The loss of the draft picks is harsh - not only do the Astros lose their picks, more importantly they the majority of their draft budget.  In 2019, the Astros were able to spend just less than $5.4MM, of which around $3.2MM was allocated to the first two picks.  While the bottom of the first round is often not *that* great in terms of baseball talent, this severely restricts their ability to sign talent falling to the later rounds, as they cannot reallocate any of their slot money into that round.  And, to make it sting a little more, the 2020 draft is supposed to be STACKED.  Sigh.

The measly five million dollars pales into comparison.  But that was the most the Commish could fine the club.  I would expect that would be reassessed at the next owners meetings, as pretty much everyone is of the belief that a monetary fine of this amount is simply is not enough to act as an effective deterrent.

The NEXT few months will be the interesting ones:  Rob Manfred has drawn a line here.  It is possible that he drafted the report and decided the penalties before the news of the Red Sox cheating broke.  But now he has a real problem.

Of course, the Red Sox cheated in a different way to the Astros.  As the currently available news indicated, they most likely needed an runner at second base to relay the sign to the batter.  The Astros bypassed that, preferring to communicate directly with the batter via noise, even with no runners on base.  But the Red Sox were penalised for this in 2017, then resumed doing so after they served their penalty.  It is possible that being a recidivist offender will attract a greater penalty from Mr Manfred.

There are a couple of other points that need to be made.  Obviously, Alex Cora is in trouble, and it is difficult to see how he would be employed in baseball in any capacity going forward after this report summary was released.  But the Commish has drawn a line in the sand around draft pick loss and Front Office penalties.  With regards to the latter, Dave Dombrowski is no longer employed within baseball, so he can't be penalised.  Chaim Bloom has only been in the job a few months, so it seems unfair to suspend him.  With regards to the Draft picks, the Red Sox have much greater payroll difficulties than the Astros, and a much weaker farm system, so a similar loss of draft picks may confine them to the AL East cellar for most of the next ten years.

But the Red Sox have a history of escaping serious punishment for transgressions.  The Mitchell Report into steroids failed to mention the Red Sox in any capacity as being a club which harboured steroid users.  George Mitchell held a board position with the Red Sox at the time of the report, which I thought put him in a position if an impossible conflict of interest.  As you can imagine, the New York press corps was not happy.  The Red Sox had Manny Ramirez (since proven as a steroid user) and a number of other players who were widely considered to be dopers at the time, but mentions of current Red Sox players were curiously absent, while the report extensively documented Yankee and Met users.

Where this really becomes interesting is if another team is accused of sign stealing.  From what I have read, it is possible that this all started with the Yankees six or so years ago.  So other teams are clearly likely to have been in on the act.  If another non-tendered pitcher in another organisation makes another accusation relating to the same time period, then Rob Manfred may find himself in a really tough (read: impossible) spot.  If the Yankees or another major team go down (for example) I think the Astros penalties will be reassessed as draconian by all and sundry

This hastens a rebuild:  I am about to do my annual ZIPS Projections Over Time article.  The Astros have a really good 2019 team, even if it has a Gerrit Cole-sized hole in the rotation.  I doubt they keep George Springer after this year, and I doubt Michael Brantley, Yuli Gurriel and Josh Reddick get re-signed as well.  After the 2021 season, Verlander, Grienke, McCullers and Correa are all free agents.  So by my estimation, the Astros will lose their three top starting pitchers and four top position players over the next two years, and I cannot see them filling those gaps out of their current farm system.

Theraguns are cheating:  As a middle aged man who does not exercise as much as he should do, and suffers the fallout of gym sessions for days afterward, I recently invested in a percussive massager (not, sadly, a Theragun).  They are definitely cheating.  I can vouch for that.  They work, and work really well.

I feel like turning the page and moving on:  AC, BatGuy, Jexas, Not Hank and your frequently-absent correspondant have been flicking around a few twitter messages.  All of us are serious Astros fans.  We all felt conflicted during the World Series, and at that point, we only knew about the bizarre Brandon Taubman debacle and self-inflicted fallout.  I have been even more conflicted this offseason - to the point where I have considered giving up baseball altogether - and I regard myself as a serious Astros fan.  This has not been fun.

But now, I feel like I can support the Astros again in good conscience.  A new GM will have "ethics" high up on the interview schedule, and the team will certainly promote better relationships within baseball.  The on-field product is immensely likeable (how can you dislike Jose Altuve??), but whispers around Luhnow and his legendary arrogance have been circulating for most of the last decade.  With any luck, we will finally be free of baseball snark.  Please.

Hey, thanks for reading down this far.  I wonder if AC will turn the comments back on so y'all can flame me below.  But these are just some quick thoughts that I have put together, with an emphasis on considering some areas that the media has not already jumped on.

Enjoy the rest of the offseason.

Monday, January 13, 2020

Judgment Day

The official punishment from MLB came to Minute Maid Park today. It is not a good day in Astros history. Is it the worst day in Astros history? I don't know about that - there have been a lot of them, some of them even as part of this saga. Anyway, let's discuss what we know so far:

The Punishment

Let's first start with what did not happen:

-The Astros were not stripped of the 2017 World Series Championship.
-No actual current Astros players were suspended.

Commissioner Rob Manfred issued the following punishments on the Houston Astros after interviewing 68 people, 23 current and former Astros, 76,000 emails, who knows how many texts and Slack conversations

-$5 million fine.
-Loss of 1st and 2nd Round picks in the 2020 and 2021 drafts.
-A ban through the 2020 World Series on GM Jeff Luhnow, Manager A.J. Hinch, and former assistant GM Brandon Taubman. Taubman can apply for reinstatement after the World Series, and any subsequent infractions could result in a lifetime ban.

The punishment is consistent with previous punishments levied by MLB: the Cardinals were fined $2 million and lost their 1st & 2nd Round picks after their own technological endeavors.

Manfred issued a 9-page statement that began with the following:
On November 12, 2019, former Houston Astros player Mike Fiers publicly alleged in an article published by Ken Rosenthal and Evan Drellich of The Athletic that the Astros had engaged in sign-stealing methods in 2017 that violated MLB's rules.

Within the first 1.5 pages of the report, Alex Cora and Carlos Beltran are specifically named as co-conspirators. The trash can banging was confirmed. Manfred:
Witnesses consistently describe this new scheme as player-driven, and with the exception of Cora, non-player staff, including individuals in the video replay room, had no involvement in the banging scheme.

After the September 15, 2017 memo circulated to all clubs, the investigation concluded that
...The Astros continued to both utilize the replay review room and the monitor located next to the dugout to decode signs for the remainder of the regular season and throughout the Postseason.

Then:
The investigation uncovered no evidence that Astros players utilized the banging scheme (Ed. Note: Thank you, Rob Manfred, for naming every single Astros fan's fantasy baseball team in 2020) in 2018. However, the Astros' replay review room staff continued, at least for part of the 2018 season, to decode signs using the live center field camera feed, and to transmit the signs to the dugout through in-person communication. At some point during the 2018 season, the Astros stopped using the replay review room to decode signs because the players no longer believed it was effective. The investigation did not reveal any attempt by the Astros to utilize electronic equipment to decode and transmit signs in the 2018 postseason.

The 2019 Astros were cleared, as well. However:
The efforts involving the replay review room staff were mentioned in at least two emails sent to Luhnow, and there is conflicting evidence about conversations with Luhnow on the topic. Regardless of the level of Luhnow's actual knowledge, the Astros' violation of rules in 2017 and 2018 is attributable, in my view, to a failure by the leaders of the baseball operations department and the Field Manager (meaning: Hinch) to adequately manage the employees under their supervision, to establish a culture in which adherence to the rules is ingrained in the fabric of the organization, and to stop bad behavior as soon as it occurred.

Regarding the 2017 Astros' player involvement:
Most of the position players on the 2017 team either received sign information from the banging scheme or participated in the scheme by helping to decode signs or bang on the trash can. Many of the players who were interviewed admitted that they knew the scheme was wrong because it crossed the line from what the player believed was fair competition and/or violated MLB rules. Players stated that if Manager A.J. Hinch told them to stop engaging in the conduct, they would have immediately stopped. 

This feels really stupid. If you know it's wrong, stop doing it. If you - a grown-ass adult - is waiting on a more-grown-ass adult to tell you to stop, you didn't really want to stop. Ultimately, the report concluded, the Astros stopped because they said it wasn't really all that effective. All this because of something that might not have actually helped. Great work, dudes.

On Luhnow, Manfred:
Although Luhnow denies having any awareness that his replay review room staff was decoding and transmitting signs, there is both documentary and testimonial evidence that indicates Luhnow had some knowledge of those efforts, but he did not give it much attention...

...While no one can dispute that Luhnow's baseball operations department is an industry leader in its analytics, it is very clear to me that the culture of the baseball operations department, manifesting itself in the way its employees are treated, its relations with other Clubs, and its relations with the media and external stakeholders, has been very problematic.

The handling of The Taubman Incident should be taught in Public Relations courses in the Don't Do It Like This portion of the syllabus.

On Hinch:
Hinch attempted to signal his disapproval of the scheme by physically damaging the monitor on two occasions, necessitating its replacement. However, Hinch admits he did not stop it and he did not notify players or Cora that he disapproved of it, even after the Red Sox were disciplined in September 2017. Similarly, he knew of and did not stop the communication of sign information from the replay review room, although he disagreed with this practice as well and specifically voiced his concerns on at least one occasion about the use of the replay phone for this purpose. As the person with responsibility for managing his players and coaches, there simply is no justification for Hinch's failure to act.

So Hinch, here, is taking the fall for what Alex Cora and Former Mets Great Carlos Beltran (who will apparently not face any punishment, given that he was a player and not management), and who knows how many of the current members of the Houston Astros, did. That he did not forcefully disagree with it - other than actually breaking the monitor on two occasions - is what led to his suspension.

On Alex Cora:
Cora participated in both schemes, and through his active participation, implicitly condoned the players' conduct. I will withhold determining the appropriate level of discipline for Cora until after the DOI completes its investigation of the allegations that the Red Sox engaged in impermissible electronic sign stealing in 2018 while Cora was the manager.

Cora is screwed, and deservedly so. And I would say this if he was still a part of the Astros' organization: let him burn. The Truly One Good SportsThing that has happened to me (and it's always about me) has been called into question because of Mike Fing Fiers, the one-year bench coach, and a Douchebag Ivy League bro.

Anyhow, those are the main points of Manfred's report. Whether you want to believe that Manfred is suddenly the Angel of Light in the wake of the What's Up With The Actual Baseballs fiasco is up to you. That said, I don't want to deflect from the very real conclusion that members of the Astros players and coaching staff cheated when it was questionable at best, and continued after it was explicitly impermissible. And then they quit doing it when they couldn't figure out if it was actually helpful. That's an impossibly stupid turn of events.

In the press conference held today, owner Jim Crane officially fired both Luhnow and Hinch. Crane:
Neither one of them started this, but neither one of them did anything about it...We need to move forward with a clean slate.

Luhnow:
I did not know rules were being broken...The sign-stealing initiative was not planned or directed by baseball management; the trash-can banging was driven and executed by players, and the video decoding of signs originated and was executed by lower-level employees working with the bench coach. I am deeply upset that I wasn't informed of any misconduct because I would have stopped it.

Manfred explicitly said in his report - again, its believability is up to you - that Luhnow was aware, and ignored it.

Hinch:
While the evidence showed I didn't endorse or participate in the sign-stealing practices, I failed to stop them and I am deeply sorry.

What Now

Crane fired Luhnow and Hinch.

Crane:
I have higher standards for the city and franchise, and I am going above and beyond MLB's penalty. We need to move forward with a clean slate, and the Astros will become a stronger organization because of this today. You can be confident that we will always do the right thing and will not have this happen again on my watch. 

The Astros now have two positions to fill: their GM, and their manager. Crane:
We'll quickly look for someone to manage the team. As soon as we get out of here today. Certainly, we have possibilities internally; we'll also look outside. The baseball operation, I will oversee. We have a number of capable guys that can run that operation. A number of them were interviewed for GM spots, one in particular (whom McTaggart notes is Pete Putila). And so we'll sit down today and start working on that and move as quickly as we can.

It's logical to assume that bench coach Joe Espada, who was a finalist for both the Cubs and Giants' managerial openings, would take over the Astros, and I'm perfectly okay with that. Joe Espada is a highly-respected bilingual baseball man who has been around the Astros players (some of whom, let's not forget, sunk this whole thing with an alley-oop from Mike MF Fiers). Crane:
Certainly, we have a bench coach that's capable. We'll certainly look outside, but we know we've got to have somebody in charge when we go to Spring Training. That could be interim. I don't have the answer yet, but we'll make it work.

If the Astros promote Espada, he'll need a bench coach to replace...himself.

Teh Medier's Reaction:

The Chronicle is loving it.

*Chandler Rome: Where do the Astros go from here?
With the firings, the most amazing era of Astros baseball is indelibly sullied by an electronic sign-stealing scheme that Major League Baseball confirmed was in existence during the 2017 and 2018 seasons.

Brian T. Smith: Cheating Astros* (sic) Pay Painful Price For Golden Era.

*Dodgers People are in a hipster canyon coffee shop just seething:

Bill Plaschke: Dodgers cheated out of a championship.

*My Dude Bill Baer: MLB's punishment for the Astros is both too harsh and also not enough.

My Reaction:

*No one will take away the joy I felt on November 1, 2017. What it does take away is Luhnow and Hinch's legacy. I've long been Anti-Asterisk. You don't need to know why Hugh Duffy needs an asterisk when he hit .440 in 1894. You don't need an asterisk on Barry Bonds' much-deserved plaque in Cooperstown. It's understood by anyone who would know who Hugh Duffy is or by anyone who would actually make the effort to go to Cooperstown. The 2017 Astros don't need an asterisk because now we all know. This is the outcome.

*The draft picks lost are more of a penalty down the road than they are an immediate penalty. It's way more of a long-term penalty than the immediate downer of today's news.

*The punishment levied on Hinch and Luhnow robs them of their legacy. That's the penalty. Hinch will probably, and deservedly, be okay, and God help us if Seattle hires him.

*Every time you get Excited About The Astros Online, you have to wear the tweets from other teams responding with an aforementioned asterisk, or a "27 Rangz" tweet, or a complete dismissal. That's how it is now. The Astros made the Yankees feel like they have the moral high ground. Do you know how hard that is to achieve?

*This is all because of unnamed players who are currently on the Astros, because of Alex Cora, because of Mike Fiers, because of Carlos Beltran, because of Brandon Taubman, because of Roberto Osuna, because of how the front office officially decided to handle the last two items. Everything came due today.

*Other teams were probably doing the same thing, but it doesn't make it okay to do it as well.

*Today wasn't fun. Let's not do this again.

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Wednesday Morning Hot Links

Well there's some movement on a lot of fronts. Let's try to run it all down.

*Chandler Rome writes that the Astros' moves in July are impacting their December. Hinch:
We're trying to be just as creative and just as aggressive at the needs that we have, but you've got to find a dance partner if you're going to make a trade. You've got to find a free agent that's ready to sign. You've got to evaluate your own talent to see who can fill from within.

Luhnow:
I can't comment on what our budget is, and that number is something that Jim and I discussed. We're clearly going to be in territory that we've never been in before. But we feel like with the resources available to us, we can accomplish the goals we need to accomplish. Any bigger moves would require some sort of trade to free up the payroll space. But those are things that are also part of our consideration.

*Jim Crane is confident in the Astros' nucleus. Crane:
I think anybody can do the math on where we're at. We've got a few holes. We need to sign a catcher, need a few arms - bullpen, maybe a starter. When you look at those ingredients and look at where we're at, more than likely that will put us over the luxury tax.

This would be the first time the Astros have been over $208m - the cutoff for the financial penalty, which would be a 20% tax from $208m-$228m, and a 32% tax from $228m-$248m.

*Ken Rosenthal reports from "sources" that the Astros have considered trading Carlos Correa. Rosenthal:
No deal appears close, and the timing might not be right for such a move, considering that most teams are set at shortstop and Correa's trade value is down. But at some point, the Astros will need to make difficult decisions, and Correa might be the odd man out...A trade of Correa might help the Astros address their pitching shortage at a time when they want to sign center fielder George Springer to a long-term deal, sources said.

Let's be clear: the Astros have parameters in place to trade you and I, and the mustache guy, and every single player, should the conversation come up. That the Astros "have considered" trading Correa means absolutely nothing, other than that they have contingency plans on contingency plans.

That said, these dudes are saying that there is framework in place for a Correa (and possibly Reddick) swap with the Reds for Luis Castilo.

*Lance McCullers is apparently ready for Spring Training, and the Astros are looking at 100-120IP out of him in 2020.

Between Gerrit Cole and Wade Miley, the Astros are looking to replace 379.2IP from the 2019 rotation.

*The Astros are going to have to bid against the Rangers, Tigers, Rays, and Pirates for Robinson Chirinos, the last living catcher.

*Chandler Rome has a story on the most uncomfortable 19 minutes of the Winter Meetings - A.J. Hinch's press conference regarding the sign-stealing scandal. Hinch:
If I was in your shoes, I would be on the other side of this table, and I would want to ask questions and find answer and get some more information on the investigation and all the allegations and things like that. I know you're probably expecting this, but I can't comment on it.

Hinch promised to talk about it...one day.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts indicated that, if the allegations against the Astros are true, then it represented an attack on the integrity of baseball.

Related, Yahoo's Tim Brown: Mike Fiers - hero or snitch? He interviewed some people:
"Heroic," said one current American League West player. "Takes big nuts to call bull-- on people and stand there and take the heat that follows. I admire that.

"Freakin' punk-ass bitch," said a former Astro.

"Mike Fiers?" said a current Astro. "Then give back your ring and your World Series share.

*Jeff Passan is reporting that the Yankees are in agreement with Gerrit Cole. It's apparently 9yrs/$324m, an AAV of $36m. The Astros were one of Mark Feinsand's "mystery teams" (and Joel Sherman's) in on Cole, apparently. The Astros will get an extra pick in Comp Round B in 2020.

11 years after getting dropped like 3rd Period French by Gerrit Cole in the draft, the Yankees finally got him. Chandler Rome, on Gerrit Cole's legacy in Houston.

In just two seasons, Gerrit Cole left his mark on the Astros' record books. He's 19th all-time in franchise history in fWAR (13.4). He has the highest K/9 among any Astros pitcher in a career (13.13) as well as the highest K/9 in a single season (13.81 in 2019), the 4th-lowest ERA for a starter (2.68), 3rd-lowest FIP for a starter (2.67). Cole is one of four Astros pitchers to strike out 300 batters in a season. He set the Astros' single-season strikeout record in 2019, with 326. Cole is one of ten Astros pitchers to record 20 wins. Hinch, on Tuesday prior to Cole signing with the Yankees:
I had a very heartfelt conversation with him following Game 7 of the World Series. I'll cherish his words that he said to me whether he returns to our team or whether he goes on, but those are some big checks being talked about around the league, and I'm not writing them.

We were truly blessed to watch Gerrit Cole pitch in Houston for two seasons and I'll never understand how he didn't get a ring. Cole was eight outs away from winning a ring (in the bullpen) in 2019 and apparently getting those final eight outs was what sent him to New York. A friend told him, "When your primary goal is to win a championship, it doesn't matter where you sleep." Andy Pettitte was instrumental in Gerrit Cole signing with the Yankees.

Bob Nightengale is ready to print some "Yankees: 2019 Winter Meetings Champs" shirts.

ESPN's Alden Gonzalez: What will the Angels do now after losing out on Cole? Well, I'm not sure, but I'm guessing the answer is "Waste the prime of Mike Trout's career."

*There's apparently an All-MLB team and some Astros are on it.

*They lost the biggest New Jersey high school football game ever played. Can one agonizing defeat destroy a life?

*Magnus Carlsen, the best chess player of the last decade, is on the verge of topping the fantasy (English) football table.

*A Musical Selection: