Is all attention actually good? If so, then MLB will have a great year. Commissioner Rob Manfred gave the Astro players immunity in order to get them to cooperate in his investigation. He was able to get the facts (except the elusive buzzers) and he suspended the GM and the manager who were then fired. But, and perhaps surprisingly, the players on opposing teams are very upset – especially on the better teams who lost to the Astros in the 2017 post-season.
It’s funny: we did not see that reaction during the PED era from opposing players – at least not so much. Now, that may have been because everyone was doing it and the other players were just happy not to be caught. We are now seeing the best players voice their anger and frustration, and some of the pitchers are threatening retaliation. Even LeBron is upset.
On the one hand, attention is good. SU predicts the Astros will set a road attendance record in 2020. Good for business. Fans welcome the chance to boo and see a hitter or two get beaned. And you can already see how this is going to play out when the Yankees play the Astros. The umpires will be instructed to protect the Astro hitters and any pitch somewhat up and in (but not really) will result in the ejection of the Yankee pitcher. Now that CC has retired, who will carry the mantle of hitting opposing batters? SU says watch out for Tommy Kahnle — he is a tough dude. No way Cole is going to hit his former teammates – not even if it would endear him to his new team. When you make $35 million a year, you call the shots. Chapman would be my other choice although likely not on purpose as he hasn’t been able to locate his fastball for 2 seasons.
No doubt April and May will be turbulent and then things will die down a bit. But down the stretch, if Houston is fighting for a playoff berth, it will pick up again. It’s hard to see how Baseball can put this behind it.
SU just read in Sports Business Journal that the NHL is nipping at the heels of MLB for popularity. The issue seems to be that the demographic for baseball is older white guys and your Gen Z and Millennials are not patient enough to watch a whole game. SU finds it hard to believe but time will tell and no doubt MLB is focusing on pace of play in a big way now. Having to change catcher signs over and over again will only slow it down more.
Men’s tennis is also faced with the pace of play issue. If you ever watch the videos of matches from back in the 1970s and 1980s, no one was toweling off in between every point, and you certainly didn’t see the ball kid running over with a towel. SU contends that players were sweating way back when – this is nothing new. Guys like Nadal will have to wear sleeves on their shirts so they can wipe away the sweat without a towel and my man Djokovic will not be able to do the OCD towel off in between each point. Use the shot clock in every tournament and no longer have the ball kid run the towel over to the player. Speed it up!
Finally, James Paxton is out and now Severino has a sore arm. We have been down this road before with the Yankees. They should have enough offense to win their share of games – although it’s all right-handed. If Gardner gets hurt, you only have Mike Tauchmann as Hicks is out until mid-year. Will we see a big year for Giancarlo Stanton? SU says yes! He’s had 2 years to get comfortable in New York and this will be his year. I know, hard to believe I am saying that but it’s time for him. I will save you a seat on the bandwagon.
Or he’ll get injured in spring training…