- Posts: 2566
- Joined: Thu Aug 23, 2012 7:26 pm
I've been mulling this over for more than a week, ever since it was announced that Padres GM A.J. Preller had been suspended without salary for 30 days by Commissioner Manfred for maintaining two separate books on the injury status of Padre players--one set for only the team, and the other set to be shared with all other ML teams. The shared set, of course, was the one seen by teams the Pads traded with. At least two of the latter complained when it was discovered that two SD pitchers had suffered serious injuries that had not been disclosed. The Padres actually undid one of the trades, with the Marlins, but not the one with the Red Sox. It was also revealed that the dual bookkeeping had been arranged between the team's new head trainer and Preller. The team owners stood behind Preller (who had been fined previously for an ethical violation when working for another team).
I confess that I'm a Padres fan, live in San Diego, and had season tickets for many years. But it really bothers me that I'm forced to believe the team got off way too leniently. There are too many unanswered questions that have not been asked, even locally. A 30-day suspension for what amounts to blatant cheating? Why only the GM, and not the head trainer? Why only a short suspension? And what about the team? If the owners were aware of the separate books, why wasn't the team punished--like a hefty fine or the loss of a draft pick or two? If they were unaware, why wasn't Preller fired instead of apparently being allowed to continue as GM after his suspension ends?
How serious, in essence, is lying to teams to whom you're trying to trade players? Maybe not as serious as throwing a World Series, to be sure, or maybe not even betting on games as a manager. But it's still cheating.
Whether you think this is a big deal or not, I'd like to hear your opinions. If nothing else, it would help me to stop wondering where are the Judge Landises when you need them?
Thanks.
I confess that I'm a Padres fan, live in San Diego, and had season tickets for many years. But it really bothers me that I'm forced to believe the team got off way too leniently. There are too many unanswered questions that have not been asked, even locally. A 30-day suspension for what amounts to blatant cheating? Why only the GM, and not the head trainer? Why only a short suspension? And what about the team? If the owners were aware of the separate books, why wasn't the team punished--like a hefty fine or the loss of a draft pick or two? If they were unaware, why wasn't Preller fired instead of apparently being allowed to continue as GM after his suspension ends?
How serious, in essence, is lying to teams to whom you're trying to trade players? Maybe not as serious as throwing a World Series, to be sure, or maybe not even betting on games as a manager. But it's still cheating.
Whether you think this is a big deal or not, I'd like to hear your opinions. If nothing else, it would help me to stop wondering where are the Judge Landises when you need them?
Thanks.