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Posted


Diaz tossed over sticky fingers.



The radio booth could see discoloration on his skin where the substance supposedly was.



Unless the rules have changed, this is an automatic 10-day vacation for Diaz.



Mets lose the roster spot.



Mets are seemingly already giving up a roster spot for the time being by sitting Marte today while they check out his knee.



Injured and slumping guys (looking at McNeil) are that much harder to carry.



Hartwig just got knee surgery.



Reid-Foley just hit the IL



Available relievers on the 40 include the not-yet-seen Ty Adcock, Cole Sulser, and Josh Walker, along with starters José Butto, Joey Lucchesi, and Christian Scott.



BUT ... it's going to be awfully hard to add somebody — optioning Stewart would be their best among bad options.


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Posted


No need to be silly. He's not a bad pitcher and unless you missed 2019, yes, he could be a *lot* worse.


Posted


A) Where did that photo come from?



B) How did we get such a high-res shot of his hook?



C) is the substance really applied so liberally so as to create a web between his thumb and index finger? Is that really what I'm seeing?


Posted


Benjamin Grimm wrote:

Shouldn't they take a sample and test it before suspending anyone?






This is a great point , kick him from the game , but then test the substance


Posted


I would agree, but I'm also unsure how that would work. Do you have a chemist and a lab at the park? Do you have an MLB official keep him under surveillance until a chemist can be procured and take a sample of the surface of his hand?



Do you take non-chemist officials and train them up to take samples on the spot? I just don't know.


Posted


Why is it necessary to have immediate in-stadium, on-the-spot results from sticky substance testing? Law enforcement personnel that gather homicide crime scene evidence for DNA testing often have to wait days if not weeks for results. What's the urgency in a baseball game?


Posted


I'm not sure exactly how true that is, but the general gist of it is why I'm wondering how that would work.


Posted


Why it's "necessary" is that his professional penalty, which has a very large financial impact — on the player, the team, the city, the gambling interests — is based on subjectively interpreted, inexpert, circumstantial evidence, and will be apparently assessed without a deeper more meaningful dive into the evidence, despite it being right there on his hand waiting for examination.



But, of course, it's not "necessary," for this is but a game, money be damned.


Posted


I'm not sure how it would work, but ,if we can do rapid testing for covid etc, surely a reliable testing kit can be manufactured? Anyway ,the Union and MLB need to figure this out , this seems unreliable


Posted


Edgy MD wrote:

Why it's "necessary" is that his professional penalty, which has a very large financial impact — on the player, the team, the city, the gambling interests — is based on subjectively interpreted, inexpert, circumstantial evidence, and will be apparently assessed without a deeper more meaningful dive into the evidence, despite it being right there on his hand waiting for examination.



But, of course, it's not "necessary," for this is but a game, money be damned.


That has nothing to do with my post. I simply asked why, if MLB decided to forensically test the substance, would it be, as you clearly wished for it to be, necessary to have immediate testing results?


Posted



Edgy MD wrote:

Why it's "necessary" is that his professional penalty, which has a very large financial impact — on the player, the team, the city, the gambling interests — is based on subjectively interpreted, inexpert, circumstantial evidence, and will be apparently assessed without a deeper more meaningful dive into the evidence, despite it being right there on his hand waiting for examination.



But, of course, it's not "necessary," for this is but a game, money be damned.


That has nothing to do with my post. I simply asked why, if MLB decided to forensically test the substance, would it be, as you clearly wished for it to be, necessary to have immediate testing results?


Any suspension could be delayed pending testing results. I'm guessing that it would be a lot quicker to test the sticky substance than to develop a DNA profile from blood or hair or fingerprint sweat.


Posted


Benjamin Grimm wrote:

They should have some kind of "hand blotter" that would take a sample that could be sent to a lab somewhere. Just keep a supply of hand blotters at each park.


Yes. The suspension, if any would be delayed pending testing. (See above post).


Posted



Edgy MD wrote:

Why it's "necessary" is that his professional penalty, which has a very large financial impact — on the player, the team, the city, the gambling interests — is based on subjectively interpreted, inexpert, circumstantial evidence, and will be apparently assessed without a deeper more meaningful dive into the evidence, despite it being right there on his hand waiting for examination.



But, of course, it's not "necessary," for this is but a game, money be damned.


That has nothing to do with my post. I simply asked why, if MLB decided to forensically test the substance, would it be, as you clearly wished for it to be, necessary to have immediate testing results?


Yes, it does have to with your post, as it is an answer to your post.



No, I don't clearly wish it to be, as I indeed expressed ambivalence, in that post, and two immediately proceeding, suggest that, yes, as a fan, I want clarity, but as a practical matter, have difficulty conceiving the resources that would have to be dedicated to such a matter.


Posted


=metirish post_id=160184 time=1719240329 user_id=72]
I'm not sure how it would work, but ,if we can do rapid testing for covid etc, surely a reliable testing kit can be manufactured? Anyway ,the Union and MLB need to figure this out , this seems unreliable

Posted


Edgy MD wrote:


Edgy MD wrote:

Why it's "necessary" is that his professional penalty, which has a very large financial impact — on the player, the team, the city, the gambling interests — is based on subjectively interpreted, inexpert, circumstantial evidence, and will be apparently assessed without a deeper more meaningful dive into the evidence, despite it being right there on his hand waiting for examination.



But, of course, it's not "necessary," for this is but a game, money be damned.


That has nothing to do with my post. I simply asked why, if MLB decided to forensically test the substance, would it be, as you clearly wished for it to be, necessary to have immediate testing results?


Yes, it does have to with your post, as it is an answer to your post.



No, I don't clearly wish it to be, as I indeed expressed ambivalence, in that post, and two immediately proceeding, suggest that, yes, as a fan, I want clarity, but as a practical matter, have difficulty conceiving the resources that would have to be dedicated to such a matter.


It's an answer to my post, but not a very good one as you make points that aren't responsive to anything I wrote. Reads more like goalpost moving to me. Whatever.


Posted


=batmagadanleadoff post_id=160190 time=1719241363 user_id=68]
=metirish post_id=160184 time=1719240329 user_id=72]
I'm not sure how it would work, but ,if we can do rapid testing for covid etc, surely a reliable testing kit can be manufactured? Anyway ,the Union and MLB need to figure this out , this seems unreliable

Posted


Saying it has nothing to do with your post and saying it's a bad answer to your post, are two very different things.



I, again, don't know why you're looking to fight over a matter upon which we are in apparent agreement.


=batmagadanleadoff post_id=160191 time=1719241532 user_id=68]Reads more like goalpost moving to me. Whatever.

Old-Timey Member
Posted



I'm not sure how it would work, but ,if we can do rapid testing for covid etc, surely a reliable testing kit can be manufactured? Anyway ,the Union and MLB need to figure this out , this seems unreliable


Test for what?

How do you measure "sticky"?

Either it is or it isn't (to the touch).

You don't have to know the chemical composition of the substance.

It is sticky.

The fact that is a dark substance and easily seen is another matter. There must be clear stick substances that wouldn't have raised suspicion. (looking for better ways to cheat)



Later


Posted


That's incorrect.



A hand being (or actually seeming) sticky isn't illegal. A hand having foreign, explicitly disallowed, substances applied to it is.



The hand seeming to be sticky is (ambiguous) evidence, but it is not the violation itself, and thus the umpires are forced to make an unfortunate judgment call.


Posted


Test for substances like Spider tack , pine tar , that they are not allowed to use , rosin they are ,come on now


Posted


You don't have to be concerned about tests becoming outdated if the rule is that certain things are okay and everything else isn't. Itemize the good, not the bad. If it's anything that's not on the good list, it's a suspension.


Posted


Benjamin Grimm wrote:

You don't have to be concerned about tests becoming outdated if the rule is that certain things are okay and everything else isn't. Itemize the good, not the bad. If it's anything that's not on the good list, it's a suspension.


I suspect the "allowed" list might be hard to define too - sweat, rosin, dirt, specs of peanut butter and chocolate from that between innings snickers, small amounts of hair gel from innocently running your hands through your hair.



Maybe the umpire should be equipped with an item of appropriate weight (an index card? a quarter?) and press it to the guy's hand, turn the hand over, and see if gravity or the sticky shit wins... if the latter, you are out of the game - and you can test yourself in the dugout so anyone who fails really deserves it.


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