Fans heckling Astros spring opener get signs stolen
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) â Fans hoping to heckle the sign-stealing Houston Astros at their spring opener were met with quite the coincidence.
They got their signs stolen.
In the Astrosâ first spring training game since their sign-stealing scandal rocked baseball, some fans brought signs jeering Houston, and ballpark personnel confiscated them before the exhibition opener against the World Series champion Washington Nationals on Saturday night.
In a Series rematch, the Nats got hearty cheers, while everyone in an Astros jersey â including the mascot, Orbit â was booed. Houston did not use any players implicated in MLB's probe.
Two men in Nationals gear sitting behind the Astros dugout briefly held up crudely drawn signs just before first pitch. One read: âYou see my hate?â in large block letters. And another said: âHoustonâ with an asterisk below it, suggesting the Astros' 2017 World Series title should be permanently blemished because of the cheating.
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The men didnât get to show off their signs for long. A woman who worked for the ballpark quickly approached to take the signs. They didn't argue with the woman, but they did look confused as she walked away with them folded in her arms.
The Astros and Nationals share a spring training complex. Houston was designated the home team Saturday.
Matthew Silliman, who held one of the signs, said he didnât know they were forbidden. He drove to the game from Tampa Bay and said heâs been waiting to let the Astros know what he thinks of them.
âIâm a big Nats fan and itâs wrong,â he said. âTheyâre cheaters.â
Commissioner Rob Manfred concluded last month the Astros violated rules by using a television camera to steal catchersâ signs during their run to the 2017 World Series title and again in the 2018 season. Manager AJ Hinch and general manager Jeff Luhnow were suspended for one season and then fired by the team, but players were not disciplined.
Fans booed loudly every time the public address announcer said âAstros,â and fans behind Houstonâs dugout heckled Jose Altuve, Carlos Correa and Lance McCullers Jr. as they stood on the dugout steps before the game. A few fans banged on their metal seats, attempting to mimic the banging on a trash can the Astros used to relay stolen signs to hitters.
One fan in a Nationals jersey yelled: âHey Altuve, are you scared to play tonight?â Others screamed âyou suck!â and âcheaters!â
About a half-dozen fans wore shirts that read âbang foul poles, not trash cansâ in reference to Howie Kendrick's decisive home run for Washington in Game 7 of last year's World Series.
First-year Houston manager Dusty Baker said he didn't think the reception was âtoo bad" and said his team will have to get used to it.
âYouâll probably get the same reception most places you go, especially the first go-round," he said. âSo, youâve just got to put your big-boy pants on and then just try to shut it out and just play baseball and realize this too shall pass."
Washington ace Max Scherzer, who started Game 7 to help the Nationals to their first title, also started Saturday and pitched two scoreless innings. He was asked if he thought Saturday nightâs game would be more dramatic considering whatâs going on with the Astros.
âMaybe, I donât know,â he said. âWe won the World Series, so it wasnât like I have a vendetta to hold. So, for me over here weâre just trying to move forward and get ready for our season.â
Scherzer was a bit disappointed that none of Houstonâs starters played Saturday when he allowed one hit and struck out two.
âYou want to face the best,â Scherzer said. âTheyâre a great lineup but I get it, itâs early in the spring youâre not going to see them.â
And while Silliman didn't get to keep his signs, he said it wouldn't stop him from heckling the Astros with his voice.
âOh yeah," he said. âTheyâre going to get it all."
He didn't have long. The game was delayed because of rain after two innings and canceled about 90 minutes later when rain continued.
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