Astros fire manager A.J. Hinch and GM Jeff Luhnow

What I’m Hearing: USA TODAY Sports’ Bob Nightengale tells us what he’s hearing in the aftermath of Astros managers A.J. Hinch and GM Jeff Luhnow being fired.

What I’m Hearing: USA TODAY Sports’ Bob Nightengale tells us what he’s hearing in the aftermath of Astros managers A.J. Hinch and GM Jeff Luhnow being fired.

WATCH: Astros fire Jeff Luhnow and AJ Hinch after MLB issues year-long suspensions

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred announced that Houston general manager Jeff Luhnow and manager AJ Hinch were each suspended without pay for the 2020 season.

Major League Baseball came down hard on the Astros for sign-stealing during the team’s 2017 World Series season. Then, owner Jim Crane further dropped the hammer.

Monday, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred announced that Houston general manager Jeff Luhnow and manager AJ Hinch were each suspended without pay for the 2020 season. Crane announced later that he has dismissed both men from their positions with his ball club. Joe Espada has been named the interim manager in Houston for 2020.

MLB’s punishment includes the Astros having to forfeit their first- and second-round draft picks in both the 2020 and 2021 drafts and MLB also fined the team $5 million, which is the maximum fine allowed.

Additionally, former Assistant GM Brandon Taubman, who was dismissed by the Astros following insensitive commentary targeted at female reporters, has been suspended one year. Taubman is not currently working for a team and is not eligible to do so during that time. His suspension is effective immediately.

MLB investigated the club after a report by The Athletic detailed the way it used a camera positioned in the outfield to detect signs. Players in a room with a monitor showing the video would relay signs to batters by banging on a trash can.

The results of the investigation reveal that the efforts were primarily player-driven, but that former bench coach and current Red Sox manager Alex Cora was involved in the setup. The investigation followed a detailed report by The Athletic on the cheating. MLB is currently still investigating the red sox after a similar report by the same outlet.

Discipline for Cora is reportedly coming and, “will be harsh,” according to ESPN.

Astros owner Crane fires GM Luhnow, manager Hinch after MLB slams club with unprecedented punishment

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred announced that Houston general manager Jeff Luhnow and manager AJ Hinch were each suspended without pay for the 2020 season.

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred announced that Houston general manager Jeff Luhnow and manager AJ Hinch were each suspended without pay for the 2020 season.

Houston Astros could face MLB’s ‘harshest’ discipline ever for sign stealing

What I’m Hearing: USA TODAY Sports’ Bob Nightengale relays what his sources are saying about the potential punishment for the Houston Astros.

What I’m Hearing: USA TODAY Sports’ Bob Nightengale relays what his sources are saying about the potential punishment for the Houston Astros.

MLB investigating Red Sox for illegal use of replay room in 2018

Major League Baseball will investigate the Boston Red Sox following a report by The Athletic which detailed the team’s illegal use of its replay room to steal signs during the 2018 season.

Major League Baseball will investigate the Boston Red Sox following a report by The Athletic which detailed the team’s illegal use of its replay room to steal signs during the 2018 season.

Why the Red Sox’s alleged sign-stealing doesn’t compare to the Astros’ cheating scandal

The Astros were on a different level.

As the Houston Astros were embroiled in a multiyear cheating scandal, it seemed inevitable that other big-league clubs would get drawn into controversy. And on Tuesday, it happened.

According to a report from The Athletic, the Boston Red Sox utilized their replay room — the room meant to assist managers decide on in-game replay challenges — to steal signs from the opposing catcher during the 2018 World Series season. The report cites unnamed Red Sox sources who claimed that players would visit the room during games, watch the catcher’s sign sequence and decode those signs to be communicated to the dugout.

The Red Sox were reprimanded for a similar misuse of the replay room in 2017, but starting in 2018, MLB strictly prohibited the use of the replay room to steal signs.

But let’s not compare the Red Sox’s alleged sign-stealing tactics to the Astros’ cheating scandal. They aren’t even in the same ballpark.

As noted in the initial Athletic report, the Astros stole signs in realtime with the help of an employee watching a live feed in a back room. That employee would bang on a trashcan to signify an off-speed pitch to the Astros hitters, and the tactics likely fueled Houston’s unprecedented in-season improvement in batted-ball rate. It was brazen, clearly against the rules and worked even when the bases were empty.

This Red Sox report, though, paints a far different picture of a system that wasn’t even effective during the postseason. Via The Athletic:

Three people who were with the Red Sox during their 108-win 2018 season told The Athletic that during that regular season, at least some players visited the video replay room during games to learn the sign sequence opponents were using. The replay room is just steps from the home dugout at Fenway Park, through the same doors that lead to the batting cage. Every team’s replay staff travels to road games, making the system viable in other parks as well.

Red Sox sources said this system did not appear to be effective or even viable during the 2018 postseason, when the Red Sox went on to win the World Series. Opponents were leery enough of sign stealing — and knowledgeable enough about it — to constantly change their sign sequences. And, for the first time in the sport’s history, MLB instituted in-person monitors in the replay rooms, starting in the playoffs. For the entire regular season, those rooms had been left unguarded.

But really, for this tactic to even work to any degree, the Red Sox player would have to accurately decode the signal sequence, communicate that sequence to the dugout and only be able to utilize it when there’s a runner on second. Plus, teams have often used a runner on second to try to communicate signs to the batter — just as opposing teams are prepared to combat that tactic. These sequences can change by inning, too.

This isn’t to say that what the Red Sox reportedly did was fine: It’s still against the rules. But there’s a huge difference between decoding signs after the fact and relaying signs to the hitter off a live feed.

It’s not even a comparison.

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MLB has some wild technological ideas to stop teams from stealing signs

Does it really need to be this complicated?

The Houston Astros’ apparent sign-stealing system was as brazen as it was simplistic: Someone in a dugout hallway with access to a live game feed would bang on a trashcan to signify an off-speed pitch.

It took former Astros pitcher Mike Fiers going on the record about the cheating to force a league investigation, but the cheating scandal has done little to calm the paranoia of clubs across baseball. According to a report from Yahoo! Sports, MLB has heard those concerns from teams and has looked into technological options that would make sign stealing virtually impossible.

The Astros allegedly used technology to cheat, and now baseball wants to use technology to stop the cheating. Via Yahoo:

One of the devices in development, described by league sources, is a wearable random-number generator (similar to a push password used for secure log-ins) that corresponds to which sign in a sequence is relevant. This would preserve the existing dynamic of a catcher putting down a sign for interpretation by the pitcher, but overlay it with a level of secure encryption that would be virtually impossible to decode even with a dedicated software program.

Alternatively, the finger system could be replaced by in-ground lights on the mound. Sources with knowledge of the idea said catchers would have access to a control pad that corresponds to a lighting panel visible only to the pitcher. A certain button for a certain light sequence for a certain pitch.

There is where MLB is at right now: Multi-factor authentication to signal pitches is being looked at as a viable option — no VPN required! But honestly, what happens if this code system crashes? Unreliable connectivity is basically the norm at major sporting events. If that system goes down, would they actually delay the game to call IT or would teams be forced to go back to traditional signs? There are a lot of hurdles to work out here.

Instead of those needlessly complicated options, MLB could look into earpieces, but the Yahoo story pointed out that minor-league testing of earpieces brought back complaints about comfort. Still, that would seem like the most logical solution here, especially when something like “comfort” could be improved.

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MLB world reacts to Gerrit Cole’s record-breaking $324 million deal with Yankees

The Yankees got their guy.

Major League Baseball now has it’s first $324 million starting pitcher as Gerrit Cole has agreed to a 9-year deal with the New York Yankees that gives him the biggest contract ever for a pitcher.

The former Astro had long been sought after by Brian Cashman and the Yankees. News finally broke shortly after 9 p.m. on the West Coast on Tuesday night, where there Winter Meetings are happening in San Diego.

Cole’s 9-year, $324 deal makes him just the fifth player in MLB history to have a deal be over the $300 million mark.

His deal comes just over a day after Stephen Strasburg signed a 7-year deal worth $245 million with the Nationals.

Cole, 29, went 20-5 last year for the Astros and was 15-5 in 2018.

The MLB world reacted to his deal with the Yanks:

Biggest sports stories of 2019

Whether it was on the field or off of it, these were some of the biggest sports stories of 2019.

Every year, the sports world provides a ton of front-page material—from the inspirational to the absolute meme-worthy comical—and 2019 was no exception. What started with the buzz of an inexplicably missed call and familiar faces holding yet another Lombardi Trophy, ended with the Baseball Hall of Fame and NCAA Selection Committee getting it right.

In between were stories of impactful women providing a voice for countless other women, while fighting to change outdated cultural normalcies. There were titles challenged, first-time champs, and a knock on a trashcan that allegedly helped a baseball team send things into orbit. And there was so much more!

Whether it was on the field or off of it, these were some of the biggest sports stories of 2019.

Saints-Rams: The no-call

Mandatory Credit: Chuck Cook-USA TODAY Sports

People were still cleaning up confetti from the New Year’s festivities when the first big-time news-maker struck. The NFC Championship Game was an overtime thriller between the New Orleans Saints and the Los Angeles Rams. But it will forever be remembered for the no-call on the blatant pass interference by Rams’ Nickell Robey-Coleman. The game ended 26-23, Rams, and though there were a few missed calls throughout the game, nothing changed the news cycle—or the NFL rulebook—like that particular blunder.