sb.scorecardresearch
Advertisement

Published 11:17 IST, February 19th 2020

LeBron: MLB's Manfred needs to listen to players' Astros ire

LeBron James is stepping to the plate for ballplayers furious over baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred's handling of the Houston Astros' sign-stealing scam.

Follow: Google News Icon
  • share
LeBron: MLB's Manfred needs to listen to players' Astros ire
null | Image: self
Advertisement

LeBron James is stepping to the plate for ballplayers furious over baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred's handling of the Houston Astros' sign-stealing scam.

The four-time NBA MVP and star with the Los Angeles Lakers unleashed in two tweets Tuesday, echoing calls for harsher punishments made by baseball stars Mike Trout, Aaron Judge and Cody Bellinger, among others.

“Listen I know I don’t play baseball but I am in Sports and I know if someone cheated me out of winning the title and I found out about it I would be ... irate!" James tweeted. “I mean like uncontrollable about what I would/could do! Listen here baseball commissioner listen to your..... players speaking today about how disgusted, mad, hurt, broken, etc etc about this. Literally the ball is in your court(or should I say field) and you need to fix this for the sake of Sports!”

James' tweets included the hashtag #JustMyThoughtsComingFromASportsJunkieRegardlessMyOwnSportIPlay”

Manfred issued a report last month detailing Houston's cheating scheme during its 2017 World Series championship season involving a video monitor and a trash can located near the team's home dugout. Manager AJ Hinch and general manager Jeff Luhnow were banned for one year by the league and subsequently fired by Houston. The only player mentioned in the report was since-retired Carlos Beltrán, who lost his job managing the New York Mets in fallout from the scandal.

No other players have been punished because Manfred promised them immunity as part of the league's investigation.

The Astros staged a team-wide apology last week at the start of spring training, but many players from the 29 other clubs say Houston's remorse felt insincere. Rather than opening spring camps with sunny optimism as usual, baseball

“That's how I feel," Judge said Tuesday. "It wasn't earned. It wasn't earned the way of playing the game right and fighting to the end and knowing that we're competing, we're competitors. The biggest thing about competition is laying it all out on the line, and whoever is the better player, better person comes out on top. To know that another team had an advantage that, nothing you can really guard against, I just don't feel like that's earned.”

11:17 IST, February 19th 2020