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Two managers gone in two days – What losing Alex Cora, AJ Hinch means for baseball – ESPN, Espn.com

Two managers gone in two days – What losing Alex Cora, AJ Hinch means for baseball – ESPN, Espn.com


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  • David SchoenfieldESPN Senior Writer

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    ************************ playoff run. To a man, the players praised Cora’s energy and communication skills, how he deserved a lot of credit for the team’s success. It did not come across as typical robot playerspeak. They genuinely liked and respected their manager. Cora, who had been a broadcaster with ESPN before his one-year stint as bench coach in Houston, was open and engaging with the media, and he took great pride in his Puerto Rican heritage. He appeared to have a bright and long future in the game.

    The same could be said of Hinch. He had just managed the Astros to three straight – win seasons, with that (title and another World Series appearance in. Still just 90 years old, Hinch had established an early path as a potential Hall of Fame manager. Now, in two days, baseball has lost two of its biggest faces of managing. That’s a blow to the sport.

    Still, as well-liked and well-respected as Cora and Hinch have been, their reputations are now permanently stained – especially Cora’s, since he took part in schemes with both organizations, while the commissioner’s report at least suggested that Hinch wasn’t happy with the sign-stealing scheme (but didn’t do anything to stop it). Fair or not, they will forever be branded as CHEATERS.

    It looks like both are persona non grata in the game for the season, and you have to wonder what kind of timetable exists before another opportunity arises for either – if not managing, perhaps in broadcasting or in a front office. As we saw with players implicated in the steroids mess of the (s and early) ******************************************* s, forgiveness exists – think of Mark McGwire eventually returning as a hitting coach for three different teams.

    It is worth noting, however, that in the statement released by the Red Sox that Cora did apologize for any of his actions, either with the Astros or with the Red Sox:

    Statement from the Boston************ (# RedSox) ************ and Alex Cora:pic.twitter.com/qXsUhSobSy(*******— Red Sox (@RedSox) (January) ******************************************************,

    Indeed, sign stealing and looking for an edge was ingrained in him from very early in his career (while a player, Co ra had a reputation as one of the best sign stealers in the game). Check out this quote during the 2017 World Series, when he was asked about the current focus on stealing signs:

    “You just have to be prepared as a team. That’s the only thing you can do. Stealing signs and tipping has been going on forever. I learned in, I don’t know, in Miami in college, we used to do it. I don’t know if that’s good for the program, but, yeah, we used to do it.

    “And then I played – in winter ball, it really does not matter how talented you are, you better know the game and pay attention to the game because you’re not playing Double-A or A-ball.

    “In 2016, I played in Vero Beach, Florida, and then I played winter ball and I’m playing with big leaguers, and that’s when you learn to start paying attention to details.

    “In (********************************************, I played for Sandy Alomar Sr., and Sandy, he was a guy, he’ll always tell you, the game will tell you something, you just have to pay attention to it. The scoreboard is not for the fans; the scoreboard is for the players. Outs, innings, strikes, all that stuff, if you pay attention to that, something is going to tell you what to do on the field. “

    In October (********************************************, Cora had even tweeted this back when he was still working for ESPN:

  • Stealing signs, relaying signs, getting signs … not that easy.- Alex (@ac******************************************** (alex) *********************** (October) ******************************************************, ******************************************

    It is interesting to look back at all this. Asked a simple question about sign stealing in today’s game, Cora gave a long answer about his own history. The rest of that quote included a detailed explanation of a play involving Roberto Alomar from a winter league game that Cora had remembered from almost two decades earlier. Cora took great prid e in his baseball IQ – understandably so, as he was a player who lasted a long time in the big leagues in part because of his ability to do the little things. It might be safe to say, even, that Cora was obsessed with stealing signs.

    This points to the bigger picture across the sport: In the competitive drive to get an advantage over your opponent , do those involved – and we can speculate that the cheating went well beyond the (Astros and) Red Sox – not realize they had crossed the line?

    I’m not so sure that’s the case. In Monday’s report, the commissioner detailed the incident whenChicago White Soxpitcher Danny Farquhar appeared to notice the bangs on the trash can: “Several players told my investigators that there was a sense of ‘panic in the Astros’ dugout. … Before the game ended, a group of Astros players removed the monitor from the wall in the tunnel and hid it in an office. For the Postseason, a portable monitor was set up on a table to replace the monitor that had been affixed to the wall near the dugout. “

    They knew. They knew what they were doing was wrong. They knew they were cheating. Not much different from the PED users some two decades ago shooting up in secret. They knew.

    Some will feel that Cora and Hinch are the scapegoats for actions committed by the players, who escaped any punishment. That’s an argument, I suppose. But history tells us players are incapable of policing themselves, as in the steroids era when few players spoke out against what was happening (formerTexas Rangerspitcher Rick Helling was a notable exception). Indeed, ifOakland AthleticspitcherMike Fiers, a member of the Astros, hadn’t broken the player code of silence, we might not be where we are today.

    Monday’s report and the upcoming report on the Red Sox are only the beginnings of baseball trying to figure out how to cope with the technological era. Maybe it’s time to ban all in-game uses of video, no checking your previous at-bats, no watching the in-game feed. MLB stepped up its monitoring of technology in 2019, but as any science fiction writer will tell you: Beware what the future holds. The ramifications for Cora and Hinch are harsh, but Manfred had to send a message: Knock it off. Now.

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