Case Closed?
Vacate the Astros’ World Series championship.
By Norman Chad, WaPo, February 2020
Simply put and I realize I am last in on this, but I only write once a week and I also sleep in weekday mornings, mainly to avoid bad news. Major League Baseball should vacate the Houston Astros’ 2017 World Series title.
I understand there is some Astros fatigue right now, but this sign-stealing saga has generated more reader mail than any issue in recent memory. In fact, if I paid out $1.25 to every Astros-related Ask The Slouch submission, I’d be writing this column at a loss.
Plus every time another layer is pulled off this Astros scandal, something tells me we will find something else sordid. Eventually, we’ll discover the Astros also had a hand in the Great Chicago Fire, the kidnapping of the Lindbergh baby and the Watergate cover-up.
So, how far have we fallen as a once reasonably minded group of revolutionaries pulling away from British oppression?
The Astros sign-stealing is the latest scandal in baseball. It’s far from the first.
- The Astros following the lead from Wall Street to the White House not only decided to flimflam repeatedly, but once caught, took a get over it stance.
- Many Astros opponents, unhappy with Commissioner Rob Manfred’s let’s-just-move-on jurisprudence, have spoken of taking justice into their own hands by throwing at Astros batters; of course, this follows the old Latin an eye for an eye and a 90 mph fastball at your head for a tooth credo.
- Naturally, we can gamble on how many times Astros betters are hit by a pitch. At William Hill sportsbook, the latest over-under season total is 81.5; there’s something very American about the ability to wager on players getting assaulted by beanballs.
Meanwhile, we heard this month, pitifully so, from Astros owner Jim Crane and Astros players, all of whom stepped to the plate and said nothing apparently they cannot speak unless they know what pitch is coming.
(We did not hear much from defrocked general manager Jeff Luhnow or defrocked manager A.J. Hinch, both currently relocated in MLB’s new witless protection program.)
Harry S. Truman famously had a sign on his desk that said, The buck stops here. Crane’s version of that is, The buck stops down the hall and to the right, in an office adjacent to the men’s restroom.
Crane contended that the electronically-aided sign stealing didn’t impact the game. In his defense, I’ll say this: If I played on the Astros, I probably would hit .000. And if I knew what pitch was coming every time, I’d still probably hit .000.
The Astros’ spring training apology tour can be summed up in a dozen words:
We’re sorry, but we’re not THAT sorry we are still the champions.
Manfred acknowledged he could’ve stripped the Astros of their title, but he said, There are a lot of things that have happened in the history of the game that arguably could be corrected. And I just think it’s an impossible task for an institution to undertake.
No, it’s not an impossible task.
You know what’s an impossible task?
-Making a full-bodied cabernet sauvignon without a single grape.
-Leaving Tallahassee Monday in a hot-air balloon and landing on Mars by Friday.
-Convincing Skip Bayless he is wrong about anything.
This was a simple task: The World Series champions had gamed the game for the entirety of their title season. They broke MLB rules in wide-scale fashion, again and again it’s called CHEATING. If a high school kid scores 95 on a biology test and it’s discovered he had the answers beforehand, do you still give him an A on the exam?
You vacate the Astros’ championship. Case closed.
Like Baretta used to say, “Don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time.”
Manfred said even putting an asterisk on the Astros’ title doesn’t make that much difference.
Let’s test that.
Example A: The Houston Astros are 2017 World Series champions.
Example B: The Houston A*stros are 2017 World Series champions.
*Actually, they’re not–they CHEATED.
I’ve got to say, short of taking the Astros’ title away, Example B looks a whole lot better to me than Example A.