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[Special Briefing](
IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE PRESIDENTIAL DAILY BRIEF
[Hard Ball](
[The Houston Astros Dossier](
This is an [OZY Special Briefing](, an extension of the Presidential Daily Brief. The Special Briefing tells you what you need to know about an important issue, individual or story that is making news. Each one serves up an interesting selection of facts, opinions, images and videos in order to catch you up and vault you ahead.
WHAT TO KNOW
Whatâs happening? As spring training gets underway for a new baseball season, the sport is consumed by a still-unfolding scandal. Four months after a former player disclosed the Houston Astrosâ elaborate sign-stealing system â in which they illegally deciphered the opposing teamâs pitching signals using cameras, allowing the batter to know whatâs coming â the outrage is only growing. Critics are calling for the 2017 World Series champs to be stripped of their title, while MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred (pictured) has been criticized for going easy on the Astros.
Why does it matter? Following the steroid crisis of the 2000s, the league leveled all sorts of bans against the offending players, albeit selectively. But in the sign-stealing scandal, the only casualties so far have been Astros GM Jeff Luhnow and manager A.J. Hinch (though the New York Mets and Boston Red Sox have also fired their Astros-linked managers). The club has been docked $5 million and lost their next two first- and second-round draft picks. The problem: Fans and players are angrier than ever, raising an important question on which the future of pro baseball may well depend: Will the players themselves be punished?
HOW TO THINK ABOUT IT
Sorry, not sorry. âI donât think I should be held accountable.â Thatâs what Astros owner Jim Crane said in a brief spring-training press conference â during which, for good measure, he also said the cheating âdidnât impact the game.â Star Houston players echoed his sentiments. Baloney, say the Astrosâ foes. "I think it was the extra edge that allowed them to move on" in 2017, said New York Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman, whose team lost to the Astros in the 2017 and 2019 playoffs. (Chapman is part of [this scandalâs Zapruder film](: When Astros second baseman José Altuve, pictured below, hit an ALCS-clinching homer off of Chapman, then demanded his teammates not rip his jersey off, it sparked speculation he was wearing a buzzer to tell him what pitches were coming.) The organization had already been in the crosshairs last season for signing reliever Roberto Osuna after he was accused of domestic violence. Now Houston is unquestionably the sportâs premier villain.
Peer-to-peer. And thatâs not just among fans: One by one, fellow players are bashing their on-field colleagues â and it ainât pretty. Atlanta Braves outfielder Nick Markakis suggested the guilty players need âa beatingâ for âmessing with peopleâs careers,â while three-time MVP Mike Trout of the Los Angeles Angels also slammed the lack of punishment. Former Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Mike Bolsinger is even doing something about it, having sued the Astros for allegedly robbing him of future potential: He was bumped down to the minors and never played pro again after a humiliating August 2017 loss to the Astros. Nor has the criticism been confined to baseball: Yesterday, NBA icon LeBron James took to Twitter to urge Manfred to âfix this for the sake of Sports!â
What now? It remains unclear whether anyone else will be punished in what the MLB itself calls âplayer-drivenâ cheating. Thatâs because Manfred granted immunity to anyone willing to speak with league investigators. So will further justice only come in the form of beanballs aimed at battersâ heads and runners sliding cleats-up into second base? Not necessarily. Analysts [have suggested a variety of punishments](, including no home playoff games for the next three seasons or even withholding postseason bonuses to all members of the 2017 squad. Sure, the playersâ union might raise a stink, but a critical mass of anger might leave the league with few other options.
WHAT TO READ
MLB Commissioner Knows Astros Cheating Scandal Has Destroyed Baseballâs Credibility, [by Dylan Hernández in The Los Angeles Times](
âIf the story of the day isnât about a previously unreported element of how the Astros perpetuated their fraud, itâs about what a prominent player had to say about baseballâs version of the New England Patriots.â
As LeBron James Rips MLB, It's Clear Astros Scandal Isn't All Bad Publicity [by Gabe Lacques in USA Today](
âThese were not criminal acts, but absurd means of cheating a game that practically claims that act as a birthright. Though many of us are loathe to admit it, there is a relatability to this scandal that resonates.â
WHAT TO WATCH
The Astros Are Pretending They Didnât Cheat and Should Be Embarrassed
âThis team does not care what you think.â
[Watch on ESPN on YouTube](
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The Astros Sign-Stealing Is the Latest Scandal in Baseball. It's Far From the First.
âIt melds both high technology ⦠and really crude technology.â
[Watch on the Washington Post on YouTube](
WHAT TO SAY AT THE WATERCOOLER
A world of cheaters. Technology isnât just being used to get ahead;Â itâs also become a weapon against cheating in various sports. In international cricket, for instance, the Decision Review System (DRS) is relied upon to minimize the chances of a batsman fooling the umpire when he's actually out. Meanwhile, soccer recently saw the introduction of âlimb-trackingâ technology to make sure players arenât offsides and video reviews to catch red-card-worthy violence that slips past the refsâ naked eyes.
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