MLB's Joc Pederson, Tommy Pham provide fantasy league (and life) lessons for all after dispute | Opinion
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It happens at some point every year.
We just start to get a handle on the baseball season and somehow football finds a way to barge in and steal the spotlight. Only this time, two baseball players were the reason.
For those who had actual plans over Memorial Day weekend and didnât follow all the drama and new developments over the 48-hour story arc, hereâs a quick recap:
During batting practice before their game on Friday, Cincinnati Reds outfielder Tommy Pham accosted Joc Pederson of the San Francisco Giants because of a dispute in their fantasy football league last season.
âI slapped Joc,â Pham later admitted. âHe did some (expletive) I donât condone, so I had to address it.â
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The scuffle resulted in players from the bullpen and the batting cage rushing to the spot in the outfield where Pham and Pederson were. No additional punches were thrown and both players left the field.
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Pham was originally in the Reds starting lineup for the game, but was later removed. That seemed to be the end of it. However, the story wouldnât die.
Through dogged reporting, we later found out Pederson had picked up a replacement for a player on his fantasy roster who was out that week due to an injury. Pham felt it was cheating because the player was inactive, but wasnât officially on injured reserve.
Additionally, Pederson shared a graphic in the leagueâs group chat of three weightlifters representing the Dodgers, Giants and Padres, with the weightlifter under the logo of the Padres (Phamâs team at the time) getting hit by the weight and falling over.
Is that enough to warrant holding a grudge for roughly eight months and then slapping someone?
Having played in a number of fantasy leagues with different formats and quirky rules, I have some thoughts.
First of all, I donât know Joc Pederson or Tommy Pham personally. But I do know that just about every fantasy league has someone like Joc Pederson and Tommy Pham.
Theyâre easy to recognize. Thereâs the person who doesnât mind bending the rules to his advantage. And when he does, thereâs usually someone else who likes to complain about it.
Not to mention thereâs the person who sometimes tends to take trash-talking a bit too far. And another who tends to take those comments â however good-natured they may have been â a little too seriously.
âIt was supposed to be a friendly thing, just making fun of they were playing bad, and just talking back and forth,â Pederson said.
Pham called it âdisrespectful.â
And yes, all too often thereâs the guy who gets mad, throws a fit and quits the league in the middle of the season. Thatâs apparently what Pham did a couple weeks after the dispute.
The sad part about the whole story is ⊠it didnât have to be that way. And it doesnât have to in any fantasy league, especially now that we have high-profile examples of what NOT to do.
Pedersonâs lesson
Itâs pretty simple. Donât be a (synonym for âJoc,â also a man's name).
If youâre playing in a league with casual acquaintances, donât assume everyone has your same sense of humor.
Pederson, who spent his first seven MLB seasons with the Dodgers, was friends with some of the other Padres players in the league. So while he may have felt comfortable joking about the Padresâ second-half collapse, Pham wasnât amused.
âJoc, I don't know you well enough to make any jokes like this,â he wrote in the group chat.
It probably didnât help matters that Pederson, who won a World Series ring with the Dodgers in 2020, went on to win another one last season as a member of the Atlanta Braves. The Padres, a franchise thatâs been in existence since 1969, have never won a World Series.
And when he was questioned about what happened, Pederson was happy to show reporters the group texts and the GIF in question to support his case.
Being a sore winner isnât a particularly good look.
Commissionerâs lesson
It isnât easy running a fantasy league. As someone whoâs overseen the original fantasy baseball experts league â Sports Weeklyâs League of Alternative Baseball Reality (LABR) â for the past 17 seasons, the job can be stressful at times.
And as is probably the case in a fantasy league with MLB players, Iâve also had to deal with some pretty healthy egos. The most important thing Iâve learned is to have a clear set of rules, follow them as closely as possible and be transparent when you need to interpret anything thatâs not covered.
In this case, I canât help but feel that having a commissioner clarify immediately whether or not Pedersonâs pickup was legal could have prevented the dispute from festering and causing Pham to quit the league.
Coincidentally, we had a situation recently in LABR in which I had a request to put a player on the injured list because his vaccination status prevented him from crossing the Canadian border. But I denied it on the grounds that the player was put on MLBâs restricted list for just those three games, making it different from being on the 7-day concussion or COVID IL. He could still bench the player, but couldnât add someone else to the roster to replace him.
This particular circumstance wasnât specifically covered in our league rules (always have them written down somewhere), but when I explained my logic he reluctantly accepted the decision. And the rules will be amended to avoid any future confusion.
Phamâs lesson
Fantasy sports are supposed to be fun, but when taken to the extreme, things can get nasty.
A sense of perspective is essential, even if thereâs money on the line. In this case, they were apparently playing for a significant amount.
Pham had a right to be upset if he felt Pederson was cheating, but quitting the league and stewing about it since last fall isnât the way to handle it. Confronting and then slapping someone definitely isnât.
MLB didnât think so either. Pham received a three-game suspension, covering all three games the Giants played over the weekend in Cincinnati.
Three games, without pay.
So on top of losing his league entry fee, the altercation also ended up costing Pham $111,000 in salary.
For anyone who thought unwritten rules were a big problem in baseball, it just goes to show things can be even worse in fantasy football.
Steve Gardner is a member of the Fantasy Sports Writers Association Hall of Fame. Follow him on Twitter @SteveAGardner