WHITE PLAINS WESTCHESTER DAILY NEWS SERVICE VISITS SINCE 2000 A.D. 25TH YEARl REPORTING THE NEWS YOU NEED TO KNOW News Service Since 2000 A.D. 2026 WILL BE OUR 26TH YEAR OF COVERING WHITE PLAINS NEW YORK USA . John F. Bailey, Editor (914) 997-1607 wpcnr@aol.com Cell: 914-673-4054. News Politics Personalities Neighborhoods Schools Finance Real Estate Commentary Reviews Policy Correspondence Poetry Philosophy Photojournalism Arts. The WHITE PLAINS CITIZENETREPORTER. TELEVISION: "White Plains Week" News Roundup, 7:30 EDT FRI, 7 EDT MON & the incisive "People to Be Heard" Interview Program 8PM EDT THURS, 7 PM EDT SAT on FIOS CH 45 THROUGHOUT WESTCHESTER AND, ALTICE OPTIMUM WHITE PLAINS CH 1300 Fighting for Truth, Justice and the American Way. TOP 10 VISITORS FROM AROUND THE WORLD :1. USA. 2.BRAZIL3.VIET NAM 4. CHINA 5. JAPAN 6.UK. 7.CANADA. 8.INDIA. 9.AUSTRALIA 10.IRELAND 11.GERMANY 12..ARGENTINA 13.BANGLADESH 14.RUSSIA. 15.NEWZEALAND. 16. FRANCE. 17.MEXICO. 18.UKRAINE. 19.SOUTH AFVRICA. 20. IRAQ.
Professor Stephen Rolandi Political Observer, who correctly forecast the 2020 election forecasts the November 2 Elections tomorrow of interest.
STEVE ROLANDI’S PREDICTIONS ON THE 2021 OFF-YEAR ELECTIONS
The big race on Tuesday is the Governor’s election in Virginia, which President Biden carried by 10% last fall with a turnout of 4.5 million. Unfortunately for theDemocrats, turnout will not be high enough (probably 2.8 million state-wide) in African-American communities and Northern Virginia to enable McAuliffe to win a new term.
He has focused more on national issues, while his opponent has focused on local issues, such as education, teachers’ salaries and school choice. Many voters see this election as a referendum on the Presidency of Joe Biden, who is in his 9th month of this term.
While the Democrats around the country will have a good night, the Virginia results are likely to be a wake-up call for the Democrats, who have two wings battling each other for dominance.
The GOP remains weak in many parts of the country, particularly the Northeast and California.
If Governor Murphy (of New Jersey) prevails, as I expect he will do, he will be the first Democratic governor to win a second term since Brendan Byrne did so in 1977.
The 2021 results are a dress rehearsal for next year’s mid- term election and 2024 as well.
Tuesday November 2, these candidates will be running for the White Plains Common Council. John Bailey, The White Plains CitizeNetReporter, interviewed all four asking them the questions that are on voters’ minds–perhaps even yours about the city of White Plains future.
Just copy and post IN YOUR BROWSER the links under each canddidate’s picture to see their 30 minute interview with John Bailey,
ALAN GRAFMAN-–COPY/POST IN BROWSER: http://wpcommunitymedia.org/people-to-be-heard/10142021-684JUSTIN BRASCH-–COPY/Post IN BROWSER: http://wpcommunitymedia.org/people-to-be-heard/10222021-780JOHN MARTIN — COPY/ POST IN BROWSER: http://wpcommunitymedia.org/people-to-be-heard/10152021-797RICHARD PAYNE—COPY/POST IN BROWSER: http://wpcommunitymedia.org/people-to-be-heard/10212021-787
BEFORE: 7: 55 A.M.AFTER: 8:15 A.M. WITHIN MINUTES A ROVING DPW CREW CLEARED THE TREE BLOCKING MANSFIELD ROAD. THANK YOU TO THE DPW CREWS OF WHITE PLAINS COORDINATING SEAMLESSLY WITH THE POLICE TO KEEP WHITE PLAINS SAFE AND MOVING.
RICHARD PAYNE, CANDIDATE FOR COMMON COUNCIL IS INTERVIEWED BY JOHN BAILEY THIS EVENING.
WITH THE ELECTION FOR COMMON COUNCIL COMING UP NOVEMBER 2, JOHN BAILEY HAS DECIDED TO REBROADCAST THE FOUR INTERVIEWS HE DID WITH THE CANDIDATES FOR COMMON COUNCIL AND THE COUNTY LEGISLATURE BECAUSE HE FEELS EVERYONE SHOULD BE INFORMED ABOUT THE CANDIDATES WHO ARE RUNNING.
2 OF THE INTERVIEWS WILL BE SEEN ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK: MR. PAYNEWILL BE ON TONIGHT FOR COUNCIL AND BENJAMIN BOYKIN RUNNING FOR COUNTY LEGISLATOR WILL BE SHOWN ON MONDAY’S WHITE PLAINS WEEK.
THEALLAN GRAFMAN, JOHN MARTIN, AND JUSTIN BRASH INTERVIEWS WILL BE AVAILABLE ANYTIME ON WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG AND ON WPCNR.COM WHERE YOU CAN GO AND SIZE UP THE CANDIDATES
WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. October 28, 2021:
County Executive George Latimer previewed his 2022 proposed Operating Budget announcing a $7 million dollar cut to the County property tax levy. This is the third County property tax cut in a row for Latimer.
(Editor’s note: new budget is $2,200,000,000, $190 Million more than the $2,009,999,999 2021 budget, A 9.5% INCREASE .)
Latimer said:“This is the largest tax cut in recent memory. I am proud of this budget and proud that through smart and innovative budgeting we have been able to cut taxes responsibly again, find new revenue sources, save and provide needed services to County residents. This is not rhetoric or lip service – this is results – this is good governing. We are committed to doing right by the people of Westchester County – and that is exactly what we have done.”
2022 NON-TRADITIONAL REVENUES AND SAVINGS MEASURES:
· Demand Response Contract –$200k per year
· Airbnb –$300k per year
· 2020 Voluntary Separation Incentive –$11.4 million of savings in 2021
THE $2.2 BILLION DOLLARA PROPOSED OPERATING BUDGET MAINTAINS ALL COUNTY SERVICES AND INCLUDES:
· NONPROFIT & RELIGIOUS INSTITUTION GRANT PROGRAM AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE FUNDING – $17 MILLION
· CHILDCARE SUBSIDY EXPANSION – $5.6 MILLION ADDITIONAL FUNDING
o Enables more families to have childcare at a reduced cost for parents.
· PROJECT ALLIANCE – $6.4 MILLION-PRIORITY RECOMMENDATION FROM THE POLICE REFORM TASKFORCE
o Eight Mobile Crisis Response Teams across the County to assist with people in mental distress.
· SMALL LANDLORD REHAB ASSISTANCE PROGRAM – $1 MILLION
o County will reimburse 75% of the cost of improvements made by qualifying landlords in exchange for keeping rents affordable for a period of 10 years.
· HEALTHCARE EQUITY AND ACCESS – $6 MILLION
o Funding for Federally Qualified Health Centers and Clinics for Infrastructure / Equipment / Telehealth Capacity and Outreach Improvements – $4 million
o Healthy Moms, Healthy Babies Nurse Home Visiting Program – $1 million
o County (Senior) Telehealth Program – $1 million
· DEPARTMENT OF EMERGENCY SERVICES TUITION REIMBURSEMENT PILOT PROGRAM FOR LOCAL VOLUNTEER FIREFIGHTERS AND EMTS – $500,000
· YOUTH UPLIFTMENT PROGRAM – $500,000
o Program will identify pre-teens in middle school and focus on wellness, fitness and life skill training with mentoring and life coaches.
Earlier this month the County Executive released his 2022 Proposed Capital Budget. The fourth proposed Capital Budget of his administration emphasizes investments in affordable housing, hybrid and electric vehicles, and recreational facilities such as Playland, Memorial Field, and the completion of a continuous Bronx River Pathway from New York City to Kensico Dam Plaza. The proposed Capital Budget requested $476.4 million in new appropriations on an all funds basis for 2022:
· $291.9 million for general County purposes;
$152.4 million for the sewer and water districts;
$4.1 million for the refuse district; and
$28.0 million for Westchester County Airport.
Latimer said: “Over the past four years we have made significant investments in our County’s infrastructure, while maximizing efficiencies to reduce costs, improved the County’s bond rating and we have done all of this while cutting County property taxes for our residents. We are not here to let things fall apart while spewing rhetoric – we are here to get results and to make life better for the over one million people who call Westchester County home. This is our County, and together we will work to make Westchester County the strongest it can be.”
Year-to-date the County has expended over $119 million on capital improvements. The backlog of capital projects has also been reduced by $400 million since Latimer took office in 2018. Over the past three years, Latimer’s Administration has made great strides to improve the capital program and increase efficiency. The most notable improvement resulted from the approval by the New York State Legislature, at the County’s request, to eliminate the $10 million dollar bond referendum cap, which ultimately saves the County money by eliminating extra costs from breaking up projects unnecessarily into pieces.
WPCNR THE FEINER REPORT. From Paul Feiner, Greenburgh Town Supervisor. October 28, 2021:
Local governments in the state such as the Town of Greenburgh will have little or no control over some aspects of cannabis, while other aspects afford more local control from a land-use perspective.
As example, municipalities can opt-out of allowing cannabis retail dispensaries and/or on-site consumption licenses (cannabis lounges) if a local law is adopted by 12/31/2021.
If a municipality does not opt-out by 12/31, it cannot opt-out in the future, but if a municipality does opt-out before 12/31, it can opt back in at a later date.
Another option is to opt-in with conditions, such as allowing dispensaries but not lounges, and/or allowing them only in certain non-residential zones away from schools, playgrounds, etc.
The City of White Plains has not promulgated the options in detail to the city at this time.
WPCNR 9 TO 5. From The New York State Labor Department, White Plains. With WPCNR Commentary UPDATED October 28, 2021 1:30 PM EDT:
On May 27, 2020, WPCNR reported in the Number of persons counted as no longer in the labor force in April 2020, when Governor Cuomo started to reopen the state after the first Covid wave was tamed, was 1,096,800
This month, 16 months later it stands at 1,105,800an increase of point 8 of a percent, indicating more persons are still not seeking work
The Labor Department yesterday reported the September 2021 unemployment rate for the Hudson Valley Region is 4.3 percent. That is down from 5.1 percent in August 2021 and down from 6.7 percent in September 2020.
In September 2021, there were 47,400 unemployed in the region, down from 57,400 in August 2021 and down from 74,700 in September 2020. WPCNR observes that means 27,300 have returned to work since the height of the pandemic in 2020.
Year-over-year in September 2021, labor force decreased by 10,500 or 0.9 percent, to 1,105,800.
WPCNR observes the people no longer working counting as left the workforce are staying at home, fear of Covid, workplaces closing, according to the Department of Labor. Ten thousand of them make up 10,000 of the total counted as now no longer unemployed.
Put another way, it is the persons no longer in the workforce statistic does double duty in putting out a positive unemployment reduction. People think 10,000 people went back to work and took jobs. But meanwhile they are also counted as not being in the workforce. It is a convenience of statistics–that 10,000 of the 10, 500 counted as not in the workforce ) is within 500 of the decline in unemployment, 10,000, less people unemployed than last year in September.
The 47,400 persons unemployed, 27,300 less than unemployed in September 2020, 74,700 (the height of the covid epidemic). But the decline in unemployment is made up of 10,500 counted as leaving the workforce this year plus those who left the workforce in 2020. This would stand to reason the Hudson Valley economy may be getting more employed but it is not a robust return to commerce the way it used to be.
The Number of persons counted as no longer in the labor force in April 2020, when Governor Cuomo started to reopen the state, was 1,096,800. This month, sixteen months later it stands at 1,105,800. Are these phantoms? How do they survive? You assume persons got jobs to lower the unemployment rate. But maybe they did not. Perhaps some did, the lucky 500.
The Hudson Valley Region’s September 2021 unemployment rate (4.3 percent) is tied with the Finger Lakes region for fifth lowest rate among the 10 labor market regions in New York State.
Capital Region 3.9 percent
Long Island 4.2 percent
North Country 4.2 percent
Southern Tier 4.2 percent
Finger Lakes 4.3 percent
Hudson Valley 4.3 percent
Central New York 4.4 percent
Mohawk Valley 4.5 percent
Western New York 4.7 percent
New York City 8.9 percent
In September 2021, the lowest unemployment rate within the region (3.9 percent) was recorded in Putnam County.
GOVERNOR HOCHUL UPDATES NEW YORKERS ON STATE’S PROGRESS COMBATING COVID-19
61,303 Vaccine Doses Administered Over Last 24 Hours
34 COVID-19 Deaths Statewide Yesterday
Governor Kathy Hochul today updated New Yorkers on the state’s progress combating COVID-19.
“New Yorkers have made tremendous progress in the fight against COVID, but make no mistake – our work is not done,” Governor Hochul said. “We all remember the spike in infections last winter and it’s now on all of us to ensure it doesn’t happen again. As we move towards colder months and more opportunities for people to gather indoors, the vaccine has become even more important. There’s no reason to wait – it’s free, it’s available and it’s the right thing to do, so get your shot today.”
Editor’s note: Locally in Westchester County new cases of covid last week from October 17 to October 23 numbered 464, 33% lower than the 691 cases the week of October 10 through 16. The average rate of infections was 9/10ths of a person for each person infected.( about 1 person newly infected infecting one other person, a sustainable rate that does not increase the number cases. The spread rate was 1 person infecting .89 a person from the 48 cases reported two weeks ago; The average number of new cases in Westchester County a day last week was 66. Number of tests per day averaged 7,113. The average infection rate was .9 of 1%.
Today’s data is summarized briefly below:
· Test Results Reported – 92,974
· Total Positive – 2,203 · Percent Positive – 2.37%
· 7-Day Average Percent Positive – 2.09% · Patient Hospitalization – 2044 (0) · Patients Newly Admitted – 204 · Patients in ICU – 454 (-7) · Patients in ICU with Intubation – 256 (+4) · Total Discharges – 207,158 (+156) · New deaths reported by healthcare facilities through HERDS – 34 · Total deaths reported by healthcare facilities through HERDS – 45,411 The Health Electronic Response Data System is a NYS DOH data source that collects confirmed daily death data as reported by hospitals, nursing homes and adult care facilities only. · Total deaths reported to and compiled by the CDC – 57,845 This daily COVID-19 provisional death certificate data reported by NYS DOH and NYC to the CDC includes those who died in any location, including hospitals, nursing homes, adult care facilities, at home, in hospice and other settings. · Total vaccine doses administered – 26,744,310 · Total vaccine doses administered over past 24 hours – 61,303 · Total vaccine doses administered over past 7 days – 390,180 · Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose – 83.7% · Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series – 76.1% · Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) – 86.8 · Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series (CDC) – 78.2% · Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose – 71.0% · Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series – 64.4% · Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) – 73.6% · Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series (CDC) – 66.2%
Each region’s 7-day average percentage of positive test results reported over the last three days is as follows:
Region
Saturday, October 23, 2021
Sunday, October 24, 2021
Monday, October 25, 2021
Capital Region
3.64%
3.67%
3.64%
Central New York
4.35%
4.24%
4.26%
Finger Lakes
4.51%
4.40%
4.43%
Long Island
2.18%
2.19%
2.16%
Mid-Hudson
1.95%
1.91%
1.90%
Mohawk Valley
4.02%
3.95%
3.85%
New York City
1.06%
1.05%
1.00%
North Country
4.88%
4.78%
4.81%
Southern Tier
3.08%
3.03%
3.06%
Western New York
4.46%
4.48%
4.65%
Statewide
2.12%
2.10%
2.09%
Each New York City borough’s 7-day average percentage of positive test results reported over the last three days is as follows:
Borough in NYC
Saturday, October 23, 2021
Sunday, October 24, 2021
Monday, October 25, 2021
Bronx
0.93%
0.90%
0.89%
Kings
1.36%
1.34%
1.26%
New York
0.69%
0.72%
0.69%
Queens
1.01%
0.99%
0.94%
Richmond
1.50%
1.51%
1.51%
Yesterday, 2,203 New Yorkers tested positive for COVID-19 in New York State, bringing the total to 2,515,947. A geographic breakdown is as follows:
County
Total Positive
New Positive
Albany
31,174
44
Allegany
4,724
9
Broome
24,862
61
Cattaraugus
7,884
21
Cayuga
8,758
13
Chautauqua
12,570
14
Chemung
11,092
23
Chenango
4,749
3
Clinton
6,853
16
Columbia
5,060
7
Cortland
5,424
11
Delaware
3,604
1
Dutchess
35,834
23
Erie
107,549
191
Essex
2,380
5
Franklin
4,370
6
Fulton
6,473
8
Genesee
7,132
12
Greene
4,434
9
Hamilton
439
0
Herkimer
6,913
23
Jefferson
9,086
51
Lewis
3,664
11
Livingston
5,819
8
Madison
6,303
15
Monroe
85,204
84
Montgomery
6,074
11
Nassau
215,227
142
Niagara
24,331
51
NYC
1,094,318
562
Oneida
28,946
30
Onondaga
52,686
62
Ontario
9,480
13
Orange
57,878
54
Orleans
4,424
14
Oswego
11,913
45
Otsego
4,632
6
Putnam
12,557
7
Rensselaer
15,024
18
Rockland
53,368
51
Saratoga
20,582
37
Schenectady
16,992
22
Schoharie
2,342
5
Schuyler
1,560
2
Seneca
2,770
3
St. Lawrence
10,772
30
Steuben
10,322
18
Suffolk
240,888
195
Sullivan
8,557
16
Tioga
5,209
15
Tompkins
6,583
3
Ulster
17,394
21
Warren
5,606
12
Washington
4,729
15
Wayne
8,328
22
Westchester
143,987
49
Wyoming
4,436
2
Yates
1,678
1
Yesterday, 34 New Yorkers died due to COVID-19, bringing the total compiled through HERDS to 45,411. A geographic breakdown is as follows, by county of residence:
County
New Deaths
Albany
2
Allegany
1
Bronx
1
Chautauqua
1
Chemung
1
Clinton
1
Erie
1
Kings
2
Madison
1
Montgomery
2
Nassau
1
Oneida
3
Onondaga
3
Orange
2
Oswego
1
Rensselaer
1
St. Lawrence
3
Suffolk
1
Ulster
2
Wayne
2
Westchester
2
All New York State mass vaccination sites are open to eligible New Yorkers for walk-in vaccination on a first-come, first-serve basis. People who would prefer to schedule an appointment at a state-run mass vaccination site can do so on the Am I Eligible App or by calling 1-833-NYS-4-VAX. People may also contact their local health department, pharmacy, doctor or hospital to schedule appointments where vaccines are available, or visit vaccines.gov to find information on vaccine appointments near them.
Yesterday,13,547 New Yorkers received their first vaccine dose, and 13,465 completed their vaccine series. A geographic breakdown of New Yorkers who have been vaccinated by region is as follows:
People with at least one vaccine dose
People with complete vaccine series
Region
Cumulative Total
Increase over past 24 hours
Cumulative Total
Increase over past 24 hours
Capital Region
762,644
468
702,521
452
Central New York
593,774
304
552,511
316
Finger Lakes
776,027
536
724,777
556
Long Island
1,926,460
2,860
1,721,536
2,485
Mid-Hudson
1,490,696
1,929
1,328,613
1,441
Mohawk Valley
298,303
224
277,149
175
New York City
6,867,509
6,014
6,156,831
6,930
North Country
276,584
250
250,989
166
Southern Tier
396,959
311
367,646
231
Western New York
852,759
651
785,814
713
Statewide
14,241,715
13,547
12,868,387
13,465
The COVID-19 Vaccine Tracker Dashboard is available to update New Yorkers on the distribution of the COVID-19 vaccine. The New York State Department of Health requires vaccinating facilities to report all COVID-19 vaccine administration data within 24 hours; the vaccine administration data on the dashboard is updated daily to reflect the most up-to-date metrics in the state’s vaccination effort. New York State Department of Health-reported data from NYSIIS and CIR differs slightly from federally-reported data, which is inclusive of federally-administered doses and other minor differences. Both numbers are included in the release above.
WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK. By “Bull” Allen. October 26, 2021:
Hello there everybody, this is “Bull” Allen
….greeting you from Yankee Stadium in the openair press box in the baseball twilight, as baseball is about to leave us once again.
I always regret when baseball slides into the cold short days of autumn when shadows of the Old Stadium Grandstand creates a blinding glare in the leftfielders’ faces early in the afternoon and as sun sets, the pitcher is deep in shadow, making their fast balls faster, harder to pick up, changeups like grapefruits, curves craftier.
They do not play in the left field at the big ball park anymore It is now a ghost park.
In the new stadium that I never go to, the grandstand is higher and there is no longer the “ Norm Siebern Glare” that caused Yankee leftfielder Norm Siebern to lose two flyballs in game 4 of the 1958 World Series . Ahh the innocence of memory!
The Old Stadium left field had a glaring sunfield and it was deep, 402 feet to left center. as the autumn sun dipped below the rim of the upper deck, the shadows went out to beyond the pitcher’s mound making the deep left field play incredibly difficult.
I saw the Yankees’ Norm Seibern misjudge three flyballs in the 4th game of the 1958 series. In those days outfielders never missed balls, not like today when outfield play is not as consistently routine even though ballparks are shallower in distance. You had to be good in the outfield in the ballparks of yesterday.
I am sadder at the end of this season. So much is wrong with the game.
The Commissioner who is now running baseball and trying to fix it is killing the game. He is cruising for a baseball strike next season with his changes, and the game will be hurt seriously
But his decision on the Houston Astros , the “Orange Sox” last year has had the effect of destroying the Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis decision on the old Black Sox World Series Fix of 1919. Whatever happened to caselaw?
In 1919, gamblers led by Arnold Rothstein got to 8 Chicago White Sox players who thought they were notoriously underpaid by their cheap owner Charles Comiskey.
The Pale Hose were World Champions in 1917. They won again in 1919, but lost the series in 8 games to the Cincinnati Redlegs. Players made errors. Pitchers threw up batting practice pitches. Well into the 1920 season it came out that Sox players had conspired to fix the 1919 series getting paid huge sums of money to do so.
They were brought to trial and found not guilty. However, Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis the new and FIRST Commissioner of Baseball, sent a strong message with this decision on the future of the “8 Men Out”
According to Wikipedia, to wit, Judge Landis wrote:
“ Regardless of the verdict of juries, no player who throws a ball game, no player who undertakes or promises to throw a ball game, no player who sits in confidence with a bunch of crooked ballplayers and gamblers, where the ways and means of throwing a game are discussed and does not promptly tell his club about it, will ever play professional baseball.[25]
Well, baseball’s Commissioner of today, Rob Manfred has turned that precedent aside. Just threw it out. This should be taken to court. Let the Supreme Court puzzle this one out.
When Manfred “investigated” the Houston Astro garbage can signals used in 2017 through 19, (three seasons!), mind you {ironically 100 years after the Black Sox episode and trial and Landis banning of the Black Sox players}, he let the players for the Astros who agreed to confirm the cheating on condition of no punishment, continue to play baseball.
That has to be the worst plea bargain ever offered eagerly accepted by the Astros.
I want to let that sink in for a moment:
Manfred let the Astros who cheated confirm they had cheated in those Astro years, continue to play baseball, make millions, and of course send the message:
you can cheat in baseball just don’t get caught, and even if you do, it’s O.K.
Many of those players will be on the field tonight as the World Series begins in Houston.
Houston has already been accused by the Boston Red Sox and the Chicago White Sox (again ironically) of cheating with whistles to signal batters what pitch was coming in the Amerlcan League this year!
Of course, they wouldn’t do that again would they?
You never know, do you?
The last time this consistent cheating happened was in 1951 when Leo Durocher (who was traded from the Yankees when Babe Ruth caught Durocher stealing money from the Babe’s locker, and the Babe beat him up), devised a signal stealing system midway through July 1951 when Brooklyn had a 13-1/2 game lead on the Giants.
Sal Ivars a Giant third string catcher in 1951 confirmed the cheating system.
Before he died, Ivars admitted he relayed the signals of what pitch was coming to the batters, when a clubhouse employee watched signals with a Wollensack Telescope (harder to see than binoculars), picking up the sign and buzzing a buzzer connected to the leftfield bullpen where Ivars would wave a towel or not wave a towel, confirmed the system. The Giants went 47-7 in August and September to tie for the pennant.
More significantly beginning July 20 when Durocher instituted the telescope sighting of catcher signal, buzz the pitch, and the Ivars wave-a-towel signal to the Giant batter, the Giants, sitting at 47 and 41 on July 20, went 49-17 to the wire to tie Brooklyn.
They won on the road, carding a 27-12 in road games during that stretch from July 20 to the end of the season. They went 22 and 5 while playing at home! They played .692 ball on the road when supposedly they were not playing stealing signs in the enemy ball parks (no buzzer) But you never know..
At home with the signal-stealing in effect, the Giants played .814 ball, 18% better than they played on the road.
If you figure without cheating at home the Giants would have played .692 ball, they only would have won 18 games at home, failing to tie the Brooks for the pennant by 4 games.
The cheating helped them tie is the statistical conclusion.
But cheating a short winner-take-all series like the 3 game or 5 game or 7 game series baseball plays in the playoffs now is a huge advantage in a clutch spot.
Both of Bobby Thompson’s homeruns in the playoffs were hit off Ralph Branca, only the pennant winning homer was hit off Branca in the Polo Grounds.
Did Thompson get the sign of the second fastball Branca threw which Thompson rifled into the lower deck in left? I think Thompson got the tipoff on the second fastball in a row.(He had taken the first pitch) It is unusual to throw two straight fastballs in the same spot.
What do you think?
When that plot came to light in the book “The Echoing Green” in 2008, nothing was done by baseball or the Hall of Fame to take away the “Championship” of the Giants in 1951, or to the cheater, Durocher.
In the 1990s, when steroids improved the output of players (you fans know who they were), and there was a corked bat discovered when a home run champion’s bat was broken by a pitch, it was discovered, but those players were not banned.
Most recently the Boston Red Sox were caught cheating with video in 2018. And Houston in 2017, 2018 and 2019.
A.J Hinch the Houston manager during the Houston cheating sat out a year then was allowed back in baseball taking the Detroit Tiger job. Hinch went 9-24 his first month and a half as manager then turned the Tigers around.
Alex Cora managed the Red Sox in 2018, in which the Red Sox used video to steal signs. Neither Hinch nor Cora were banned for life.
The only player banned from baseball (other than the White Sox 8) from gambling on his own team, not cheating, was Pete Rose the man with the most hits ever in major league baseball and one of the most durable. A player who made every team he played for a champion and managed one to a Championship, too (the Philadelphia Phillies).
Three players on the Astros after they admitted cheating, mocked the fact that they got away with no punishment. One saying, “What are you gonna do about it?” No contrition.
Manfred is weak.
Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis is rising from the grave to haunt Mr. Manfred.
Baseball like all business goes along to get along. They forgive you if you play along and say they care when they really do not.
The baseball establishment (sportswriters) won’t put Pete Rose in the Hall of Fame.
But, Pete never cheated.
Leo Durocher is in the Hall of Fame. He cheated big time.
Here is a man who cheated to win a pennant and they do not remove his plaque?
This continued “looking the other way on the Astros” is a disgrace and is the worst part of this season.
Howard Kesselman wrote in reader comments on TheEchoing Green something very profound about major league baseball cheating:
”There is also the ethical question which was never memorialized into a rule in baseball. How far can a team go in stealing signs? At what point does it go from a crafty custom and skill to one that all would say transcends the bounds of fair play. For me the telescope meets the latter test. “
I also say garbage cans, video review that the Red Sox did come under the same transcendence.
No punishment sends the wrong message: you can do it, just don’t get caught.
By the same token, steroid use as used by players in the 1990s, corked bats, and recently by players in last years of their contracts to up their numbers meets that transcendence. Fraudulent performance like a drugged race horse, It should have the Landis penalty—outright banning.
Saying you’re sorry and you regret it is not good enough.
The Astros did not even do that. They mocked Manfred. They mock him still by their behavior and arrogance on the garbage can and whistle blowing.
The game this season was not the game, the national pastime it once was.
2021 has been a Frankenstein of a season.
The owners’ “Dr. Frankenstein” is trying to create a baseball of his own to make more money for the owners. The players are suspicious of the owners Baseball in the last full blown year of competition in 2016, before the cheating began in 2017, made 9.5 Billion dollars in revenue, the NFL, 13 Billion.
Baseball came back after covid, but this season has seen really boring baseball .The Wild Card-Playoffs have seen the two teams with the best records fail to make the World Series—again.
What did we see with Dr. Frankenstein in charge?
Bullpen strategy was upended with the rule that pitchers coming in must pitch to three batters. This introduced the idiocy of the righty-lefty-right-lefty batting order which often compromised outfield defence with weak arms, and bad fielders in infield positions.
Major league managers have not caught up to this.
Pitchers in relief are used every day. The pens wear out.
Starting pitchers are running out of gas after 5 innings. Bullpens have been exhausted by having to hold leads for 5 innings virtually every game because of the lack of starters who can be effective for 7 innings or 6, forgive me for expecting that.
Five or 6 innings, I beg your pardon, is not a quality start.
Pitchers who can go 7 or 8, like Jacob Degrom, have had their arms blown out by being overpitched.
Degrom faded out in June with a sore arm. He may never be as dominant again. When Degrom went down, the Mets mailed in the season. Same thing happened with the Yankees. You cannot be a one-pitcher team. The Met general management went for hitting, when they really needed pitching. Go figure.
The batters’ averages tanked, as they swung at high gas, outside gas, inside gas, spitballs, doctored balls, whatever creative pitches pitchers could come up with, swinging for the short fences, trying to pull the ball and many batters cannot hit smartly with men on base bcause they either can’t hit the ball through a wide open shift hold, or choose to pull the ball for a homa.
The Yankees were an excellent demonstration of that. The hitters could not move the runners. Manager Aaron Boone never employed the hit and run, the steal, the sacrifice bunt. Strikeouts soared. The big hitters got up and it was either a homer, a strikeout, pop up or double play. End of rally.
Across baseball, strikeouts soared, pitchers had to throw more pitches, more foul balls were hit. And by the 5th or 6th they were done. No stuff. More blasts.
What has happened to pitching coached by pitching coaches who knew how to pitch back in the day?
There are none. No Tom Seavers, Johnny Sains, Mel Stottlemeyers, Jim Turners, Dave Righettis, who knew how to pitch teaching mechanics in the major leagues and minors.
Instead major league baseball has become an aristocracy of mediocrities with manager positions and coach positions filled by .250 hitters, .500 record pitchers wrecking young talent with pitch counts, and innings limitations, whom you’ve got up and down the minors and majors.
If you’ve never won 200 games, you cannot teach a pitcher how to win consistently in the big leagues.
If you have never hit 40 homers and .300 in the same year, you are not able to teach hitting. The last good hitting coach who was not a great hitter was Harry Chiti who invented a stance that really improved mediocre players.
The less competent hitters were not as deft this season at working the count to 3-2s and keeping it there.
On the other hand, the intentional walk has been abandoned as a strategy because of the pitching to 3 batters in a row bullpen rule.
Pitching to Eddie Rosario Friday night in the Atlanta-Dodger series with two out and two on with first base open was ridiculous. Rosario has been killing the Dodgers. Why let him be given a chance to beat you again? The LA starter was in his 4th inning!!!!. Dumb managing is so prevalent. As it turned out that Rosario line homer was the winning hit. Never let the guy who’s owned you hit with ducks on the pond.
The media coverage this season was terrible. The papers never carry box scores. They never give you details on the game until 24 hours later.
It is tough to broadcast a game from a monitor let alone watch it in the stands. You have broadcasters like John Sterling and Suzyn Waldman watching television feeds in New York and trying to do play-by play. The ownerships are so cheap.
I hope this practice of isolating the play-by-play voices in a studio ends. And, another thing. Every feature on every broadcast is sponsored. So instead of concentrating on the drama of the game, you get a short plug.
Pretty soon we will have a sponsor of the count for each batter. “Eddie Rosario’s At Bat is brought to you by TheCitizNetReporter Where Every Story’s A Hit,” Or you could sponsor “Counts,” The Payoff Pitch is sponsored by Goldman-Sachs Let us make you Rich Maybe” The NFL has not caught on to this yet. Kickoffs could be sponsored. 2-point conversions sponsored. Punts could be sponsored Sacks could be sponsored.
The Commissioner who is now running baseball and trying to fix it is killing the game. He is cruising for a baseball strike next season with his changes to the game, and the game will be hurt seriously.
I like shifts. I like positioning players the way a batter hits. That is scouting.
What is wrong is the hitters are not as good!
They won’t hit to the deserted side of the infield.
Maybe it is because they can’t.
I am reminded of the simplest advice of all given by Rabbit Maranville of the old Highlanders, the Yankees of the past:
“Hit ‘em where they ain’t.”
What ever happened to that?
Well they’re sweeping out the stands now. No more ball at the big ballpark of memory. The fans are popping beer cups in the aisles. The tarp is on the infield. A ballpark is very sad when the fans are filing out and the pop of beer cups echo.
The smoke from my White Owl Wallop drifts out of the press box down into the empty box seats.
The sunset over the stand casts a sweet melancholy of memory of greats in the sun making the spectacular play– like this great catch Wes Covington of the Milwaukee Braves (above) backhanding a screaming line drive off Bobby Shantz’s bat in Game 2 of the 1957 series that I saw in person.
I see him to this day, racing from shallow left center on an angle the sun on his back — as the liner was a double if it dropped and 2 runs off Lew Burdette.
With dramatic unfolding precision Wes speared the ball backhanded and tumbled head over heels and held on to the ball. to take away a double.