Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Vernon Wells has checked in on the case of the man in the white shirt. From Anaheim, VW said it's ridiculous, laughable. Case closed.
by rgriffinstar via twitter 11:44 AM
TORONTO -- Dustin McGowan took another step forward in his possible return to the Major Leagues with an impressive outing for Double-A New Hampshire on Wednesday afternoon.
McGowan allowed just one hit and two walks while striking out four in four scoreless innings. It was his first start for the Fisher Cats after making his first seven rehab appearances with Class-A Dunedin.
The 29-year-old, who hasn't appeared in the big leagues since 2008 because of a variety of shoulder injuries, got through the four innings on just 43 pitches. That fell short of his 65-pitch limit, but the Blue Jays had predetermined he wouldn't surpass four frames.
Peter D. said:I find the sign stealing allegation ridiculous. But for discussion sake, I really don't find it to be a big deal if it were true. I suppose it's another layer added to the whole notion of home field advantage. Plus, should the onus not be on the team to adapt and adjust and mix up their signs at any hint of this? What a load of bunk.
Saint Nik said:I couldn't disagree more. There are very good reasons why this sort of thing shouldn't be done or allowed.
To start with, if this practice were acceptable, there's no reason why the Yankees couldn't park a guy right next to the Jays guy in CF(assuming there is one) and do the exact same thing. So there is no reason why it'd be a "home field advantage". It'd just make stealing signs part of the game.
Worse than that, it'd make stealing signs a really important part of the game. A baseball game would then be hugely impacted by the actions of a non-player sitting in CF as opposed to the players on the field. Suddenly the abilities of a team to steal signs, and the technology to relay them, would be another area of competition between teams. Call me old-fashioned but I'd rather it be about which guys are better at playing baseball.
And where would it end? Tapped bullpen phones? Bugs in clubhouses?
Like people have said, if you can get a runner to second base, try to steal a sign. But having non-players stealing signs in the bleachers would violate a pretty fundamental aspect of the game(that being that a hitter shouldn't know what's coming).
Peter D. said:Weren't the Yankees accused of stealing/flashing signs with their scoreboard a years ago? Something to the effect of one blinking light on the bottom corner suggested one pitch, two flashes suggested another. Doesn't necessarily have to be a fan sitting in centre field and that's what I'd consider home-field advantage. And I highly doubt that the Jays/Yankees *supposedly* are the first team to try this.
Peter D. said:I must really be missing something here because I just can't wrap my head around the legitimacy of such thing. I sit at home with the camera zoomed in on the catcher flashing a whack of signs and the majority of the time I have no clue what's going to be thrown
Peter D. said:Tapped bullpens, bugs in clubhouses -- even those I question how much impact they'd have. I could sit behind home plate and yell "outside", "inside" and so on and I doubt that it'd have much of an impact on the team's hitting ability. I'd love to find out first that teams can, with their naked eye, from the dugout for instance, be able to steal the signs of the opposing team's base coaches to know what play they intend to implement. Sure, things are picked up, but I do believe that the onus is on the opposing team to either run a different set of signs or hide them better if they feel there is some sort of outside interference.
Saint Nik said:I'm not really sure what your point is here. There have been lots of teams trying things they shouldn't over the years. It doesn't change that it's not something you're supposed to do and the reason you're not supposed to do it is because it changes the game and emphasizes things that don't happen on the field of play.
Saint Nik said:But you're also not someone who's around big league signs and know the way teams do things. If it was your job to study game film and break the signs down it could probably be done pretty quickly.
Well, regardless of the level of the impact it may or may not have it's still a game of baseball and not the Cold War. Teams shouldn't be trying to win by means of sophisticated technological espionage.
Peter D. said:I'm more frustrated that the Jays are categorized as such huge cheaters in this whole thing as if this is some new shocking revelation where in fact it's been going on for years. I'm curious to know how much traction this story would get on the negative side if it were the Yankees instead of the Jays.
Baseball operations bulletin C-4 forbids team employees from using hand signals to convey pitch speeds and types.
Peter D. said:Unfortunately, technology has a huge impact in today's world, sports included. Perhaps studying game film and breaking down pitchers' and players' tendencies should be frowned upon as well.
dm_for_pm said:How does Dan Uggla have a 31-game-hit-streak and a .224 batting average?
dm_for_pm said:How does Dan Uggla have a 31-game-hit-streak and a .224 batting average?