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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Once a distant competitor to the NFL …

Once a distant competitor to the NFL and MLB, Stern also built the NBA into a sought-after media property. The league signed its record-setting nine-year, $24 billion rights deal with ESPN and TNT just months after Stern stepped down as commissioner. As NBA revenue grew, players saw a sharp increase in salaries. The average player earned just $330,000 in 1985 but nearly $8 million as of this season.

WATCH: Hyun-Jin Ryu signs four-year deal with Toronto Blue Jays

Hyun-Jin Ryu is trading in his Dodger blue for another shade of blue.

Hyun-Jin Ryu is trading in his Dodger blue for another shade of blue.

USA Today Sports’ Bob Nightengale reported Sunday night that the former Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher is getting four years and $80 million dollars with the Toronto Blue Jays as the club looks to add some pitching to complement its growing arsenal of young bats.

Ryu held the league’s best ERA in 2019 at 2.32, going 14-5 in 29 starts and finishing second behind the Mets’ Jacob deGrom in NL Cy Young voting.

The South Korean pitcher has played all seven years of his MLB career with the Dodgers, joining the big-league club in 2013.

K.J. Wright believes NFL should reconsider policy on marijuana

K.J. Wright, who is the Seattle Seahawks NFL players association rep, believes the league should reconsider their policy on marijuana.

The NFL handed down an indefinite suspension to Seattle Seahawks receiver Josh Gordon on Monday, effectively ending his tenure in Seattle and jeopardizing his NFL career.

It was the sixth drug related suspension of Gordon’s career.

Gordon’s latest suspension, and the news that the MLB plans to stop testing for marijuana next season, has many folks clamoring for a similar rule change in the NFL.

“I think they need to look way more into it,” Seahawks linebacker and player rep K.J. Wright told the Seattle Times. “I think the old mentality of marijuana that it is just terrible for you and does bad stuff for you, I think they definitely need to look into it. I don’t know why that is still a rule and why that is the case.”

It is unclear if Gordon’s latest suspension involves marijuana use or not, but he has been connected to marijuana previously.

Wright called the MLB’s decision “a step in the right direction”, and he believes the NFL will eventually start taking steps to change their outdated policy.

“I think so, because at the end of the day, the whole PED thing is getting a competitive advantage,” Wright continued. “Like, we know some things give you a competitive advantage and I don’t think marijuana gives you an advantage. … At the end of the day, what it’s all about is making things fair and competitive.”

The Seahawks will host the Cardinals on Sunday, without Josh Gordon, at 1:25 p.m. PT.

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Gerrit Cole should have forced the Yankees to get rid of their silly rules

Let the facial hair grow!

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Gerrit Cole is a grown adult. He is going to get paid $324 million bucks over the next nears years while playing the beautiful game of baseball. And he could be the key to bringing home multiple World Series titles during his stay in the Bronx.

But during that time he will not be allowed to grow a beard. Or grow his hair too long.

For real.

Cole was officially introduced as a Yankee on Wednesday and he looked very different, as his beard was gone and his bushy hair was trimmed a bit. That, of course, was because of the Yankees’ archaic rules that don’t allow beards or hair that goes over the collar.

Seriously, they still have these rules in 2019, which is absurd and should be forgotten about once and for all.

This whole thing started way back in 1973(!) when the late George Steinbrenner made the rules after watching a bunch of hairy players wear the pinstripes on Opening Day. Mustaches are OK, long hair and beards are a no go!

Here’s the official rule, which makes it seem even more silly:

“All players, coaches and male executives are forbidden to display any facial hair other than mustaches (except for religious reasons), and scalp hair may not be grown below the collar. Long sideburns and ‘mutton chops’ are not specifically banned.”

I mean, who even says ‘mutton chops’ these days? Well, besides hipsters in Brooklyn.

Don Mattingly and Lou Pinella challenged these rules during their time with the team but nobody lately has raised a stink over it. I guess it’s hard to speak up when you’re cashing monster checks every two weeks, but still.

Cole, who grew up a Yankees fan, had a chance on Wednesday to take a stand for all the players on the team who are dying to rock a beard during the season. Imagine if he showed up looking like he did last season with the Astros and was like “This is my team now. Beards for everyone.” What would the Yankees do to their $324 million dollar man?

Nothing.

(Photo by Mike Stobe/Getty Images)

Beards, if you’ve ever walked down any street on planet Earth, are very popular these days. They are also a lot different than those worn in the early 1970s. Now most beards are trimmed nicely and put together with a sharp attention to the small details. Even the ones that aren’t trimmed short still look fine and add some character to those who let it grow.

It’s also silly that baseball players can’t have beards considering how they spend most of their time – in glorified sweatsuits (with belts) while either chewing tobacco, spitting seeds, or chomping on some Double Bubble bubble gum.

But no beards?

Come on!

A team full of grown adults playing for one of the most prestigious franchises in all of sports shouldn’t have to follow these rules made from such a different time. There weren’t even HD televisions back then. That’s a long time ago!.

But here we are.

Cole had his chance to be a hero.

Instead, he shaved his face.

Which is so lame.

Wednesday’s biggest winners: Emmitt and E.J. Smith.

E.J. Smith is a very good running back, too, and on Wednesday he picked Stanford over Florida, where his dad once starred. Was Emmitt bummed out about that? Nope, not all. Instead, he was a proud dad who had the best reaction to his son’s decision to forge his own path. His message about his son was too good. You should watch it.

Quick hits: Wild NBA stories… Herman’s double birds… USC’s recruiting disaster… And more!

Richard Mackson-USA TODAY Sports

– Mike Sykes breaks down the top 10 wildest moments from the NBA over the past decade that you might have forgotten about, like Bryan Colangelo’s burner Twitter account.

– Texas football coach Tom Herman celebrated National Signing Day by flipping double birds at the Longhorn Network cameras.

– USC did not have a good Signing Day and college football fans let them have it.

– Kevin Garnett thinks the Celtics ‘broke’ LeBron James back in 2010.

– PGA Tour golfer Max Homa had a lot of fun roasting the golf swings of a lot of his Twitter followers.

(Follow me on Twitter at @anezbitt. It might change your life. Just don’t tell me about your fantasy team.)

WATCH: Terry Francona’s World Series rings recovered from burglary

Police have recovered two World Series rings belonging to Cleveland Indians manager Terry Francona.

Police have recovered two World Series rings belonging to Cleveland Indians manager Terry Francona.

The Pima County Sheriff’s Department in Tucson, Ariz., made an arrest Tuesday night tied to a burglary of Francona’s Tucson-area home, in which his 2004 and 2007 World Series rings from his time as the Boston Red Sox manager were stolen.

Francona reported the rings stolen Nov. 7, though the burglary is believed to have taken place earlier in the year.

The sheriff’s department said in a statement that investigators discovered the rings had been sold to a sports memorabilia store in Phoenix by someone asking for $40,000 per ring.

The suspect was arrested and charged Tuesday with three felonies: second-degree burglary, theft, and trafficking stolen property.

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Did Gerrit Cole REALLY keep the same sign he had as a Yankees fan in 2001?

HMMMMMM.

I don’t mean to burst anyone’s bubble here, but I’m not the only one curious about something that happened during Gerrit Cole’s introductory press conference with the New York Yankees.

Let’s go back to 2001 for a second: Cole was 11 years old, and despite growing up in California, he was a Yankees fan. While attending the World Series in Phoenix, he brought a sign that read, “Yankee fan today tomorrow forever” and was snapped by Newark Star-Ledger photographer William Perlman holding it up before Game 6.

It’s a snap that went viral once again after Cole signed with the franchise he rooted for.

And on Wednesday, he brought the sign with him and presented it to owner Hal Steinbrenner:

But here’s the question I have: the sign in the original photo has blue lettering. This one has yellow lettering.

Is that really the original sign? Is this The Dress all over again?

Look, maybe after 18 years, the lettering faded a little. Or … maybe it’s not the same sign.

I’m not the only one asking about this:

Here is the side-by-side for comparison:

 

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