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NFT: Astros using technology for sign stealing documented

Matt in SGS : 11/12/2019 3:27 pm
So it's been long rumored that the Astros were stealing signs. So much so that the Yankees went to this thing where they kept changing the signs based on signals in their hat (and shut out the Astros in Game 1 of the ALCS).

The Athletic had an article about the Astros sign stealing in 2017.

Anyway, the Astros are an unlikeable group of dicks before this and even moreso now. Jomboy had a good example of it on his twitter. Take a look. As he says, screw AJ Hinch.
https://twitter.com/Jomboy_/status/1194348775965437952?s=20 - ( New Window )
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Wikipedia's on the case  
Mad Mike : 11/17/2019 1:37 pm : link
*
lonk - ( New Window )
RE: RE: The Astros put their monitor in the tunnel  
rich in DC : 11/17/2019 2:58 pm : link
In comment 14681597 pjcas18 said:
Quote:
In comment 14681593 Greg from LI said:


Quote:


Basically, just a few feet from the dugout.



exactly. Not illegal.


Something for the naysayers to keep in mind- unless the commish decides to take actions against players and gets the MLBPA involved, MLB doesn't even have to find a rule violation. They just have to find that the Astros (and any other teams) went outside norms and took unfair advantage.

Owners and teams operate under a different set of rules than players do. Where players can appeal and fight, teams are basically bound by commmish decisions- they can ask the commish to reconsider, but they can't take it to arbitration or other similar actions.

Remember when the commish fined the Red Sox for using Apple watches in the dugout? That was back in 2017- and the supposed rule that people are making a big deal about regarding electronics use wasn't put in place until AFTER that rule.

Note VERY carefully in the article linked below that MLB specifically found that use of electronics to steal signs was in violation of the rules.

The commish also noted that when the Yanks complained about the Sox conduct, the Sox stopped the use of the Apple phone. In the Astros situation, numerous teams have complained about their sign stealing and it is quite clear that the Astros never stopped.

I think that when you compare the evidence of what appears to be a limited use of an Apple Watch by the Red Sox and sustained, multi-year efforts by the Astros to steal signs and gain an advantage, I don't think MLB has any choice but to hand down extreme punishment on the Astros. They have apparently repeatedly lied about their conduct, engaged in years of efforts, and gained a significant advantage.

IMO, it would be difficult for MLB to do anything less than a lengthy or permanent ban for numerous Houston front-office personnel, significant fines and likely loss of draft picks to deter any future conduct.

Don't be surprised if anyone involved- even if no longer with the Astros sees singiifcant punishment as well.
MLB announcement on Red Sox Apple Watch use - ( New Window )
rich  
pjcas18 : 11/17/2019 3:13 pm : link
I agree with you the league has an array of options to dole out punishment, but the difference between what the Red Sox did and what the Astros did is the Red Sox broke a clear rule about using electronic equipment in the dugout.

Seems like the Astros violated more ambiguous (and in some cases "unwritten") rules.

If the punishments are reasonable, I don't think you'll see much fight, if they are extreme as you and many others suggest, I think the punished could fight it. And I'm not sure MLB has solid grounds to win. Not sure.

And I'm not suggesting what the Astros did was ok. Just trying to view it from unemotional standpoint.

RE: rich  
rich in DC : 11/17/2019 5:51 pm : link
In comment 14681695 pjcas18 said:
Quote:
I agree with you the league has an array of options to dole out punishment, but the difference between what the Red Sox did and what the Astros did is the Red Sox broke a clear rule about using electronic equipment in the dugout.

Seems like the Astros violated more ambiguous (and in some cases "unwritten") rules.

If the punishments are reasonable, I don't think you'll see much fight, if they are extreme as you and many others suggest, I think the punished could fight it. And I'm not sure MLB has solid grounds to win. Not sure.

And I'm not suggesting what the Astros did was ok. Just trying to view it from unemotional standpoint.


I'm not sure where you are getting your information, but it appears that you are not aware of what the Astros are accused of.

The Astros allegedly had a VIDEO SCREEN installed in the hallway outside the dugout that showed the catchers signals. In turn, the information was relayed to the on-field players by various means- banging on a can, whistles, etc.

I am not sure how you have concluded that this does not involve "electronic equipment."

The Red Sox were penalized for having someone in the dugout with an Apple Watch used to relay pitch calls. The Astros went a step further (a marathon further?) by allegedly installing a video monitor outside the dugout to capture signs.

In another factor, the Red Sox allegedly only used the Apple Watch on a very limited basis. In constrast, the Astros allegedly appear to have used this system for YEARS.

The Red Sox allegedly stopped the use of the Apple Watch when the Yanks complained. The Astros have allegedly used this system for years, denied using it.

Now an email exists that asked their scouts to set up cameras in taking the scheme an extra step further- a FACT that is now known, not an allegation.

Assuming the remaining allegations are true- and the email casts doubt on any denials by the Astros- the scheme involved the heavy use of electronics, took place over a lengthy period of time, and despite protests and allegations by teams, continued without end.

The other piece that you do not seem aware of (despite my raising it in my prior email), TEAMS are NOT allowed to challenge actions by the commish. As part of the franchise rules, they are bound by those decisions, cannot arbitrate them. IF MLB comes down hard on the Astros and their execs, there is not much the Astros can do. They can't sue MLB, they can't arbitration- only appeal for mercy to the commish. Not sure where you got this idea that those punished can fight it.

If players are involved, them the MLBPA will get involved- but team personnel don't have those protections.
Yes  
pjcas18 : 11/17/2019 5:57 pm : link
there was a rule preventing electronic equipment INSIDE the dugout. That is how the Red Sox broke a rule.

the Astros did not put the electronic equipment INSIDE the dugout. 5 feet from the dugout, in the hallway between the clubhouse and the dugout, right outside the steps of the dugout, is not INSIDE the dugout.

Read the other article I linked earlier, here is an excerpt

Quote:
....In recent years, as cameras have proliferated in major league ballparks, teams have begun using the abundance of video to help them discern opponents’ signs, including the catcher’s signals to the pitcher. Some clubs have had clubhouse attendants quickly relay information to the dugout from the personnel monitoring video feeds.

But such information has to be rushed to the dugout on foot so it can be relayed to players on the field — a runner on second, the batter at the plate — while the information is still relevant. The Red Sox admitted to league investigators that they were able to significantly shorten this communications chain by using electronics. In what mimicked the rhythm of a double play, the information would rapidly go from video personnel to a trainer to the players....


not sure where he disconnect is.

Good video from jomboy  
bubba0825 : 11/17/2019 6:06 pm : link
Of the setup. Video supports everything said thus far
Link - ( New Window )
RE: rich  
rich in DC : 11/17/2019 8:01 pm : link
In comment 14681695 pjcas18 said:
Quote:
I agree with you the league has an array of options to dole out punishment, but the difference between what the Red Sox did and what the Astros did is the Red Sox broke a clear rule about using electronic equipment in the dugout.

Seems like the Astros violated more ambiguous (and in some cases "unwritten") rules.

If the punishments are reasonable, I don't think you'll see much fight, if they are extreme as you and many others suggest, I think the punished could fight it. And I'm not sure MLB has solid grounds to win. Not sure.

And I'm not suggesting what the Astros did was ok. Just trying to view it from unemotional standpoint.


You are trying too hard. Go back and read the article I linked above and read the EXACT quote from MLB. In fact, I'll save you the time- here it is:

"Major League Baseball Regulations do, however, prohibit the use of electronic equipment during games and state that no such equipment 'may be used for the purpose of stealing signs or conveying information designed to give a Club an advantage."

There is no distinction in there about "in the dugout." You are trying to create gray area where there is none. The precedent is clear and unambiguous.
The rule  
pjcas18 : 11/17/2019 8:05 pm : link
was just created/made clear this past February. February 2019.

From what I have seen the allegations and videos are not from this season.


RE: The rule  
BigBlueShock : 11/17/2019 8:06 pm : link
In comment 14681984 pjcas18 said:
Quote:
was just created/made clear this past February. February 2019.

From what I have seen the allegations and videos are not from this season.


There are TONS of videos out there from this season
You're really trying to put up a legalistic hairsplitting defense here  
Greg from LI : 11/18/2019 12:03 am : link
I think you have to look at the overall context here. For one thing, the Astros are pretty much out of friends around the league for a myriad of reasons. No other franchise is going to go to bat for them. The extent of this thing, and the brazenness of it, is so far beyond anything similar that ever came to light. This goes straight to the integrity of the game, and a huge chunk of fans around the country are pretty pissed off about it. MLB is not in a position to simply blow them off, not with them trying to hold on to the fans they have as much as trying to generate new ones.
btw, here's the monitor  
Greg from LI : 11/18/2019 12:05 am : link
This is a still from the Astros' official 2017 World Series highlight video, if you can believe that. You can see the entrance to the dugout in the background, towels hung to obscure any outside view of the monitor, and a man who appears to be removing the monitor after the game.

and here's something curious - what camera is this?  
Greg from LI : 11/18/2019 12:11 am : link
It's not a broadcast camera - those are in the camera well behind the Budweiser logo. Why is this one camera up by its lonesome in a somewhat obscured location? I have no idea what it actually is, and in all honesty you'd think the Astros would be a bit sneakier about it, but I really am curious as to what it is.

RE: The rule  
rich in DC : 11/18/2019 7:28 am : link
In comment 14681984 pjcas18 said:
Quote:
was just created/made clear this past February. February 2019.

From what I have seen the allegations and videos are not from this season.



Give it up on.

The Red Sox got punished in 2017. 2017. Way before any 2019 rule you are grasping onto. The way you are defending the Astros is silly. MLB isn't going to split hairs to go easy on the Astros. They told teams back in 2017 no more issues or the penalties would be severe.

The Astros also have been involved in this sign stealing for 3 years- at least. The Red Sox got fined major money in 2017 for supposed short time actions.

Your defense is not any sort of unemotional view like you claim. You are going to extreme lenghts to deny the obvious.
Stop it  
pjcas18 : 11/18/2019 9:26 am : link
I'm not defending the Astros, only throwing water on your fantasy that there will be "multiple lifetime bans" as a result of this.

When the Red Sox were punished there WAS ALREADY A RULE against electronic equipment in the dugout.

period.

the Astros knew this rule and did not use electronic equipment in the dugout.

It's that simple. I never said what they did was ok, they should be punished, I just don't think their punishment will be as scorched earth severe as some of you (mostly Yankees fans it seems).

No one even got a lifetime ban from spy gate, but some of you expect "multiple life time bans" from something that is similar.

that is my only disagreement. Every single article on this topic mentions that stealing signs in baseball is not illegal, only using electronic equipment to do so is illegal and that language was tightened up in February of 2019. And the ironic thing is MLB only even tightened up the rules on it - not because it's cheating, but because they felt like the whole process of stealing the signs and relaying them was impacting pace of play.

So, again, no, not defending Houston at all, they cheated, plain and simple and there should be consequences, my point is some of you might be disappointed with the punishment.

And if you're not, and the league handles this like the Black Sox scandal, great, you get what you want, I don't care about the Astros.
This really isn't anything like Spygate  
Greg from LI : 11/18/2019 9:32 am : link
None of us ever saw the actual evidence of Spygate. The tapes of the Astros with trash cans banging and whistling are all over the Internet. You may not care about this, but I'm telling you that it's absolutely not just Yankees fans who are angry. The Astros were already becoming a widely despised franchise even before this. Digging in on a minor technicality that the monitor wasn't in the dugout (but just a few steps away) isn't going to save them.

I agree with you that it's unlikely we see any lifetime bans (although, given John Coppolella's lifetime ban, I think they deserve some), but I do expect some lengthy suspensions.
There..  
FatMan in Charlotte : 11/18/2019 9:42 am : link
will be multiple disciplinary actions taken. whether or not they are lifetime bans is immaterial.

The league has a mountain of evidence of wrongdoing here.
The Braves situation  
pjcas18 : 11/18/2019 9:42 am : link
is not comparable. MLB had been working to clean up the IFA wild wild west and already instituted rules around this process.

It's comparable to spy gate to me because they were video taping signals in an effort to improve their competitive advantage. both outed by a disgruntled former teammate/personnel who didn't want that unfair advantage used against them.

The fact you don't know what was on the tapes for spy gate is basically irrelevant since for the Patriots it was a timing thing - just weeks before being caught MLB issued a memo reinforcing rules against the practice.

In the Astros case, the rules against it were less clear IMO. Until 2/19, so if, like most articles say the investigation is for the 2017 playoffs, it's a little bit of a gray area the details around the rules, but most articles I have seen say teams who break the rules can be punished with loss of draft picks and international pool money.

I think because the front office was aware MLB can be more heavy handed than that language, but still I don't expect multiple lifetime bans. that is my point.

I'd be surprised with lifetime bans  
bigbluehoya : 11/18/2019 9:47 am : link
but I hope and expect that the penalties will be strong enough to show that they really aren't fucking around about this stuff anymore. Major fines, draft picks, IFA $, among other things should all be on the table. The penalties handed to the Braves should be a starting point, and it should go up from there. This is a significantly more direct threat to the league and the game.

To me, it's pretty clear at what point something crosses over into the obvious cheating realm, and it doesn't take a fine-tooth combing of the rules to get there.
I referenced lifetime bans  
bceagle05 : 11/18/2019 9:48 am : link
with the scouts and execs involved in those emails in mind. No-name guys who could take the fall while Hinch, Cora and Beltran get slapped on the wrist. The commissioner was quoted the other day saying the punishment will have to be “prophylactic enough” to prevent others from engaging in this behavior - sure sounds ominous. I also agree this is not just sour grapes from Yankee fans - the whole league despise those Houston douchebags.
it's not irrelevant  
Greg from LI : 11/18/2019 9:48 am : link
The mountain of videos is what's driving fan anger. MLB is going to have to confront that. They can't afford to lose a lot of fans over the perception that a team cheated on a massive scale, won a championship via cheating, and the league is doing little about it. The NFL's position in 2007 was much more secure than MLB's position in 2019.
RE: I'd be surprised with lifetime bans  
bigbluehoya : 11/18/2019 9:49 am : link
In comment 14682313 bigbluehoya said:
Quote:
but I hope and expect that the penalties will be strong enough to show that they really aren't fucking around about this stuff anymore. Major fines, draft picks, IFA $, among other things should all be on the table. The penalties handed to the Braves should be a starting point, and it should go up from there. This is a significantly more direct threat to the league and the game.

To me, it's pretty clear at what point something crosses over into the obvious cheating realm, and it doesn't take a fine-tooth combing of the rules to get there.


my reference to the Braves was not inclusive of the lifetime ban to Copp. That slipped my mind. I was referring to the severity of the real things that got taken away from the org. Suits can be replaced.
Yankees fans aren't even the most aggrieved  
Greg from LI : 11/18/2019 9:50 am : link
Go to a Dodgers fan board and see what they're saying. They 100% feel that a World Series championship was stolen from them.
Those home and away  
section125 : 11/18/2019 10:00 am : link
stats posted the other day were so ridiculously outrageous that it should have been obvious something was going on before.
This is what my reaction was to  
pjcas18 : 11/18/2019 10:04 am : link
Quote:
There's now an email trail
bceagle05 : 11/16/2019 9:14 pm : link : reply
between Astros execs and scouts regarding ways they can cheat, according to The Athletic. People are gonna get lifetime bans over this.


this is it. I do not expect multiple life time bans.

who knows, maybe MLB decides to make an example and they do give people the death penalty, but I don't expect it will happen. loss of draft picks, loss of IFA money, fines, and suspensions is my guess.
RE: This is what my reaction was to  
bigbluehoya : 11/18/2019 10:13 am : link
In comment 14682336 pjcas18 said:
Quote:


Quote:


There's now an email trail
bceagle05 : 11/16/2019 9:14 pm : link : reply
between Astros execs and scouts regarding ways they can cheat, according to The Athletic. People are gonna get lifetime bans over this.



this is it. I do not expect multiple life time bans.

who knows, maybe MLB decides to make an example and they do give people the death penalty, but I don't expect it will happen. loss of draft picks, loss of IFA money, fines, and suspensions is my guess.


As someone who wants to see the Astros get pummeled, I care incredibly more about the fines/IFA/draft picks than any bans on front office personnel.
Here's a good twitter thread about how unlikely the explanation  
Greg from LI : 11/18/2019 6:04 pm : link
that the monitor was just for reviewing at-bats. Nick Francona is Terry's son.
bah, forgot the link  
Greg from LI : 11/18/2019 6:10 pm : link
Also, Sherman published a column today claiming that he's been told that the Astros used some kind of electronic buzzer system like the casino cheats Ace Rothstein catches in Casino...now that one I find hard to believe, but after everything that's come out, who knows?

Quote:
In recent days I have had scouts and executives talk to me about a variety of methods they think have been or could be employed, such as a realistic-looking electronic bandage placed on a player’s body that buzzes in real time to signal what is coming — one buzz for a fastball, for example — if the surveillance determines what type of pitching is coming. One person I spoke to has ties to the Astros and said he already had spoken to MLB’s investigators.

Link - ( New Window )
an interesting little postscript  
Greg from LI : 11/20/2019 10:03 am : link
On r/baseball at Reddit, someone linked to a post from Game 2 of this year's World Series which, long before the Athletic story was published, talked about the Astros cheating.

Quote:
I had a dream a couple weeks back when the astros were playing the rays, it was that after the post season finished a news story came out that the astros had a team of people deciphering signs with cameras and then that team relayed the signal to transponders that were worn in the cleats of the top (trusted not to snitch) astros players, the transponders would vibrate according to what pitch was coming (example: once for fastball, twice for off speed)

But it was just a dream haha. That wouldn't happen.


Which is leading to a lot of speculation regarding the identity of this whistleblower.

Link - ( New Window )
This whole scandal...  
Dunedin81 : 11/20/2019 10:08 am : link
is a heaping helping of karma lavished on a team that seems to have treated pretty much everyone as disposable. But flags fly forever, so even if they hammer them down to an expansion-level roster (which they can't and won't) it would all be completely worth it.
Technically, flags don't HAVE TO fly forever  
Greg from LI : 11/20/2019 10:14 am : link
They could be stripped of their title. Won't happen, but I can dream.
Nah  
Dunedin81 : 11/20/2019 10:20 am : link
I hate that stupid bullshit when the NCAA does it. You can take down their flag and Astros fans still remember winning it, and they still got the bump in ticket sales and revenue when they did (likely far larger than any fine that gets levied). And what happens after that, do they put up a flag at Chavez Ravine? Nobody remembers them winning anything because they didn't.
BTW, good game last night  
Greg from LI : 11/20/2019 10:25 am : link
Lamb put quite a scare into me. He certainly found his stroke from outside after a terrible shooting slump to start the season.

Hoos have got to start getting some scoring from the new guys. All but four points last night were scored by Diakite, Key, Huff, and Clark.
RE: Nah  
bigbluehoya : 11/20/2019 10:26 am : link
In comment 14684522 Dunedin81 said:
Quote:
I hate that stupid bullshit when the NCAA does it. You can take down their flag and Astros fans still remember winning it, and they still got the bump in ticket sales and revenue when they did (likely far larger than any fine that gets levied). And what happens after that, do they put up a flag at Chavez Ravine? Nobody remembers them winning anything because they didn't.


I agree - let each fan determine for his own mind whether he or she is going to discount the championship in question. Rather see the penalties weighted toward hurting the offenders going forward (and more importantly, deter any future bullshit) than take an imaginary eraser to something you can't make people forget.
RE: BTW, good game last night  
Dunedin81 : 11/20/2019 10:41 am : link
In comment 14684532 Greg from LI said:
Quote:
Lamb put quite a scare into me. He certainly found his stroke from outside after a terrible shooting slump to start the season.

Hoos have got to start getting some scoring from the new guys. All but four points last night were scored by Diakite, Key, Huff, and Clark.


They've got to get keyed up for that. Not every team is going to shoot 25% from outside. Not unlike Edwards for Purdue last year, sometimes you're going to face a hot hand. I'm not worried, UVM couldn't have given them that sort of game in February. Defense was still strong and they were moving the ball well. I'll be worried if none of the kids emerges to be at least an 8-10 point a game guy by mid-January.
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