20DodgerMiracle24
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Post by 20DodgerMiracle24 on Mar 22, 2024 3:11:24 GMT
It's not ST anymore, so now, to kick off the '24 season 2 days late...
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20DodgerMiracle24
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Rob Manfred is a disaster to our national pastime.
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Post by 20DodgerMiracle24 on Mar 23, 2024 14:59:39 GMT
One thing on Showtime's favor is that, as Doug McKain said, "this won't be anything close to the Pete Rose scandal", and that this is kid stuff by comparison.
This article says that the only thing Showtime did wrong was to hire a crook:
MLB opens investigation into Shohei Ohtani interpreter allegations
Jack Baer
Jack Baer·Staff writer
Updated Fri, March 22, 2024 at 7:05 PM MST·7 min read
326
MLB announced Friday that it has opened an investigation into the Shohei Ohtani interpreter scandal that rocked baseball this week.
The story broke Wednesday, when Ohtani's attorney released a statement accusing his longtime interpreter and friend, Ippei Mizuhara, of "massive theft." A subsequent ESPN report revealed that Ohtani's camp had told the outlet that the Los Angeles Dodgers superstar had agreed to pay off $4.5 million in gambling debts for Mizuhara, only for that camp to disavow Mizuhara on Wednesday.
Mizuhara gave a 90-minute interview to ESPN detailing how Ohtani supposedly paid off the gambling debt via wire transfer, which is a federal crime as well as a potential violation of MLB rules. He recanted that story Wednesday, insisting that Ohtani had no knowledge of his gambling.
The Dodgers quickly fired Mizuhara, who was working for the team during their series in South Korea as the story broke.
The full statement from MLB, which misspelled Mizuhara's surname and was released at 5:56 p.m. ET during the first round of March Madness:
“Major League Baseball has been gathering information since we learned about the allegations involving Shohei Ohtani and Ippei Mizuhari (sic) from the news media. Earlier today, our Department of Investigations (DOI) began their formal process investigating the matter.”
No mention was made of sidelining Ohtani, who made his Dodgers debut earlier this week and is set to play in the team's stateside opener on Thursday in Los Angeles.
MLB investigators will be tasked with sorting out a scandal that has seen multiple stories and conflicting narratives swirl around the new face of the league, who signed a $700 million contract with the Dodgers last offseason after winning his second career AL MVP award.
The IRS has also announced that it is investigating Mizuhara and Mathew Bowyer, the allegedly illegal bookmaker to whom Mizuhara was reportedly indebted.
Ohtani's camp reportedly requested that authorities investigate Mizuhara, but ESPN reported earlier Friday that neither the California Bureau of Investigation nor the FBI is currently working on the case, nor are law enforcement in Los Angeles and Orange counties. The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Central District of California reportedly declined comment.
The Shohei Ohtani interpreter scandal is still confusing
The unanswered questions and changing stories around Ohtani have caused widespread speculation over the past two days; even ESPN seems to be struggling to sort out how the facts have been reported to them from two continents.
The outlet published a timeline Friday of how it approached the story, but even that leaves plenty of uncertainty about how and why Ohtani's camp went about its response.
As ESPN tells it, the outlet contacted Ohtani's agent, Nez Balelo, to ask about information it had found — namely, that Ohtani's name appeared on two wire transfers worth a total of $1 million that had emerged in a federal investigation of Bowyer's alleged illegal gambling operations. ESPN received a response 2.5 hours later from a recently hired crisis-communications spokesman.
Three more hours later, that spokesman reportedly said that Balelo approached Mizuhara and Ohtani, with the former "coming clean" about Ohtani covering his debts and the latter supposedly saying he had done so in $500,000 increments. Ohtani was quoted as saying, "Yeah, I sent several large payments. That's the maximum amount I could send."
Crucially, these questions were reportedly funneled to Ohtani through Mizuhara.
The first Mizuhara interview followed, in which he expanded on the story of Ohtani knowingly paying off his gambling debts. ESPN's timeline revealed some new details from that 90-minute conversation, such as Ohtani's former Los Angels Angels teammate David Fletcher, now a member of the Atlanta Braves, allegedly being present at the poker game at which Mizuhara allegedly met Bowyer.
A curious change was in the reporting around Mizuhara's salary. He was initially reported to have told ESPN that he made between $300,000 and $500,000 annually from the Angels and Dodgers, but Friday's timeline claims that he was making only $85,000 from the Angels when he met Bowyer in 2021:
"I couldn't share this with Shohei. It was hard for me to make my ends meet. I was going paycheck to paycheck," Mizuhara says. "Because I kind of had to keep up with his lifestyle. But at the same time, I didn't want to tell him this."
As for how he supposedly asked for Ohtani's help, he indicated that Ohtani had no idea it was to cover illegal gambling losses:
Asked if Ohtani knew the person owed the money was a bookie, Mizuhara says his friend "didn't have any clue."
"I just told him I need to send a wire to pay off the debt," Mizuhara says. "He didn't ask if it was illegal, didn't question me about that."
The excrement hit the fan Wednesday, immediately after the Dodgers' season-opening win against the San Diego Padres in South Korea.
Dodgers team owner Mark Walter reportedly told the players that a negative story was coming, Mizuhara told the room he has a gambling addiction, and president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said Ohtani had helped cover Mizuhara's losses.
The latter point was apparently news to Ohtani:
On the way back to the hotel, Ohtani starts asking questions about what had been said in the clubhouse, the Ohtani spokesman told ESPN, and that's when his representatives say Ohtani told them he didn't recognize Mizuhara's version of the events. According to the Dodgers official and Ohtani's spokesman, Ohtani's representatives had continued to rely on Mizuhara to communicate with Ohtani while they were dealing with the situation, and Mizuhara did not tell Ohtani what was happening.
According to the Ohtani spokesman, Ohtani discovers for the first time Wednesday that money is missing from his account.
Mizuhara was soon fired and later told ESPN he lied to Ohtani. However, he denied misinforming Ohtani while interpreting for him and declined to answer whether he took money from Ohtani's bank accounts without his knowledge.
Ohtani's ex-Angels teammates shocked, don't believe he would have bet on sports
This whole situation has been particularly surreal to Ohtani's former Angels teammates, with whom Mizuhara also worked.
As they told the Orange County Register's Jeff Fletcher, they don't seem to believe the so far unfounded theory that this has all been a cover story for Ohtani himself gambling:
“Weird,” said left-hander Patrick Sandoval, who had spent as much time with Ohtani as anyone over parts of the previous five seasons. “That’s all I can really say about it. Really weird.”
While players did not want to go on the record, speaking privately there was a consensus that Ohtani did not seem to show interest in other sports. That would seem to support Mizuhara’s assertion that he was betting for himself, rather than placing bets for Ohtani. Mizuhara reportedly also said that none of the bets were on baseball.
Mizuhara has repeatedly denied that Ohtani did any gambling — one of the few things that has stayed the same in his story. From ESPN:
Asked if he intended to pay back Ohtani, Mizuhara says he told his friend he would. He adds that Ohtani has never gambled and "thinks gambling is terrible."
"He sees that people, teammates would be gambling all the time, and he'll be like, 'Why are they doing this? Gambling is not good.' He would make comments like that. People would ask him to go to casinos on road trips, and he would never go. No, he's not into it."
Bowyer, the bookmaker involved, has also said he has never met or spoken with Ohtani.
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jrgreene6
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Post by jrgreene6 on Mar 23, 2024 17:43:47 GMT
Dude must be a TERRIBLE gambler. $4.3 million? How does one get THAT far under?
Think I read somewhere that golfer Phil Mickelson had blown close to a half billion on betting.
We usually take $400 when we go to the local casinos around here.
When our $200 each is gone, that’s it and we then put our winning slips in the cash dispenser.
Sometimes we win, sometimes we lose. But it’s usually not much more than a couple hundred bucks either way.
When we used to go for a long weekend in Vegas every year, we’d take around $500 a day to wager. Same deal there.
Only time we broke that rule was when we went for an entire week. Lost about three large that year.
Last time we went for more than a long weekend.
GO DODGERS!!!
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 23, 2024 19:42:37 GMT
"Asked if he intended to pay back Ohtani, Mizuhara says he told his friend he would."
He WAS getting $85,000 a year. Now he doesn't even have that.
I'm not buying this story.
Gonna move this to Dodgers All Day, guys.
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Post by dking on Mar 24, 2024 6:25:24 GMT
Fabian Ardaya posted on twitter, Ippei Mizuhara claimed in his Angels media guide he graduated from UC Riverside in 2007. The school shows no record of that being the case. I bet Ippei is not his real name either total scam artist
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 24, 2024 12:33:11 GMT
Fabian Ardaya posted on twitter, Ippei Mizuhara claimed in his Angels media guide he graduated from UC Riverside in 2007. The school shows no record of that being the case. I bet Ippei is not his real name either total scam artist Both sides.
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 24, 2024 12:33:59 GMT
It still doesn't explain how he got a 4.5 million dollar line of credit.
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20DodgerMiracle24
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Rob Manfred is a disaster to our national pastime.
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Post by 20DodgerMiracle24 on Mar 24, 2024 13:34:45 GMT
Fabian Ardaya posted on twitter, Ippei Mizuhara claimed in his Angels media guide he graduated from UC Riverside in 2007. The school shows no record of that being the case. I bet Ippei is not his real name either total scam artist Both sides. None of Showtime's old Angel teammates can imagine him getting involved in a scandal like this. As I said earlier, his only mistake was hiring Mizuhara, not knowing what a crook he is. Showtime's name has been cleared as far as I can see.
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 24, 2024 23:44:05 GMT
Dodgers' Emmet Sheehan: Could face hitters this week Rotowire 2 HRS AGO Sheehan (forearm) is scheduled to throw a bullpen session Monday before potentially facing live hitters later in the week, Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic reports.
The right-hander landed on the injured list ahead of the season-opening, two-game series against the Padres in South Korea last week, but he continues to progress in his throwing program. Sheehan will likely require multiple rehab appearances after facing live batters, so he's likely to be sidelined through the first few weeks of the season.
Dodgers' Andre Lipcius: Clears waivers Rotowire 8 HRS AGO The Dodgers outrighted Lipcius to Triple-A Oklahoma City on Saturday after he cleared waivers.
Lipcius will remain in the Dodgers organization, but he'll face a tougher path to seeing action with the big club now that he's no longer a member of the 40-man roster. He posted a .742 OPS over 38 plate appearances with the Tigers late in the 2023 season but after being traded to the Dodgers in March, Lipcius was unable to make enough of an impression in spring training to earn a spot on the club's season-opening roster.
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 25, 2024 3:15:44 GMT
Dodgers' Bobby Miller: Will start Game 2 of first home set Rotowire 46 MINS AGO Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Sunday that Miller will start the second game of Los Angeles' home-opening set against the Cardinals that starts Thursday, David Vassegh of AM 570 LA Sports reports.
In the Dodgers' season-opening two-game series against San Diego in South Korea, Tyler Glasnow started Game 1 and was followed by Yoshinobu Yamamoto in Game 2. However, with the team now back on U.S. soil and approaching the traditional opening series, Miller will follow Glasnow in the rotation while Yamamoto will get the ball third. Miller has had a decent spring, posting a 2.77 ERA, 1.31 WHIP and 9:3 K:BB over 13 innings and finishing his exhibition slate with four shutout frames against the Angels on Sunday.
Dodgers' Yoshinobu Yamamoto: Pitching third in first home series Rotowire 54 MINS AGO Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Sunday that Yamamoto will start the third game of the team's initial home series against St. Louis, which begins Thursday, David Vassegh of AM 570 LA Sports reports.
Yamamoto got the start in the second game of the Dodgers' season-opening two-game set in South Korea against the Padres, following Tyler Glasnow in the rotation. While Glasnow will again take the mound for the team's home opener Thursday, he'll be followed by Bobby Miller in the second game of the series before Yamamoto gets the ball Saturday in Game 3. Yamamoto struggled in his MLB debut, lasting just one inning and giving up five earned runs, though it's not clear if that had anything to do with him moving behind Miller for Los Angeles' first home set.
Dodgers' Tyler Glasnow: Will start home opener Rotowire 1 HR AGO Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Sunday that Glasnow will start the team's home opener Thursday against St. Louis, David Vassegh of AM 570 LA Sports reports.
Glasnow started Los Angeles' first game of the season, allowing two runs over five innings in a no-decision against the Padres in South Korea on March 20. Due to the unique configuration of the regular-season schedule -- the Dodgers are now back in the United States playing exhibition games before Thursday's home opener -- Glasnow will be able to start twice in the team's first three regular-season contests. The right-handed hurler tossed 77 pitches in his initial start against San Diego, and he should be able to push that a bit higher Thursday versus the Cardinals.
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 25, 2024 20:59:58 GMT
Ohtani presser due in 45 minutes.
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 25, 2024 23:32:28 GMT
I'm still having trouble believing an interpreter with an $85,000 annual salary accumulated over 4 million dollars in debt. Like Mulder said - "I want to believe."
Man, if he's throwing the interpreter under the bus, he's worse than Rose.
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 26, 2024 0:16:19 GMT
Shohei Ohtani on gambling scandal: 'Shocked' MLB star calls out interpreter's 'lies,' denies paying bookmaker
Ohtani broke his silence on the scandal involving his former interpreter, Ippei Mizuhara, on Monday By Mike Axisa 42 mins ago • 3 min read
Los Angeles Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani spoke with the media on Monday for the first time since Major League Baseball opened an investigation into allegations that his longtime interpreter Ippei Mizuhara -- since fired by the Dodgers -- had placed illegal bets on non-baseball sports and Ohtani's bank account was used to pay an illegal bookmaker millions of dollars.
During his press conference Monday, Ohtani said he has never bet on baseball or any other sports, and that Mizuhara stole from his bank account. This comes after Ohtani's lawyers last week said he was the victim of a "massive theft."
Here is part of Ohtani's statement, which he read in Japanese and was translated by Dodgers interpreter Will Ireton:
"I wanted to be here to be able to talk. I'm sure it was a tough week for fans and the organization. On a personal note, I'm very saddened and shocked that someone I trusted has done this. Obviously today there are things that I am limited to talk about. I do have a document in front of me that will detail what has happened.
"I never bet on baseball or any other sports. I have never asked anybody to do that on my behalf. I have never gone through a bookmaker to bet on sports. Up until a couple of days ago, I didn't know this was happening.
"Just to go over the result, Ippei has been stealing money from my account, and has told lies.
"... The first time I knew about this gambling -- Ippei's gambling -- was after the first game (in Korea) when we had the team meeting in the clubhouse. During the team meeting Ippei was speaking English and I didn't have a translator at my side. But even with that, I started to feel that there was something amiss.
"...Obviously I never agreed to pay off the debt or make payments to the bookmaker. And finally, when we went to the hotel and talked one to one, that was when I found out he has massive debt, and it was revealed during the meeting that Ippei admitted that he was sending money using my account to the bookmaker.
"And at that moment -- obviously it was an absurd thing that was happening -- I contacted my representatives at that point. When I was finally able to talk to my representatives, that's when my representatives found out Ippei has been lying the whole time. And that's when I contacted the Dodgers and my lawyers.
"In conclusion, I do want to make it clear I never bet on sports or have willfully sent money to the bookmaker. To summarize how I'm feeling right now, I'm beyond shocked. It's hard to verbalize how I'm feeling at this point."
Ohtani did not take any questions after reading his statement.
Mizuhara originally told ESPN in an interview last week that Ohtani had paid off his gambling debt, an amount that had reached at least $4.5 million. However, his story changed a day later, and the now-fired interpreter later said Ohtani was unaware of the payments. The story broke while Ohtani, Mizuhara and the Dodgers were in Seoul, South Korea to open the MLB regular season against the Padres. The clubhouse meeting Ohtani referenced came after their season-opening win in Korea.
MLB's policy allows personnel to gamble on non-diamond sports (e.g. baseball and softball) provided that such activity is legal in that jurisdiction. Sports betting remains illegal in California, however. That, in turn, explains why Mizuhara is alleged to have placed his bets with an accused bookmaker at the center of a federal investigation.
The accused bookmaker, Mathew Bowyer, has denied through his lawyer that he ever talked to or met Ohtani, but Mizuhara originally claimed that Ohtani voluntarily paid off his gambling debts. Mizuhara later changed his story, stating that Ohtani was not aware of the situation. A law firm representing Ohtani told CBS Sports that the two-way superstar "has been the victim of a massive theft."
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts told reporters on Sunday, including Jack Harris of the Los Angeles Times, that he thinks it's "good" for Ohtani to speak with the media about the situation. He reiterated that he does not believe the Ohtani-Mizuhara story has been a distraction to the rest of the clubhouse.
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20DodgerMiracle24
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Post by 20DodgerMiracle24 on Mar 26, 2024 2:26:57 GMT
I'm still having trouble believing an interpreter with an $85,000 annual salary accumulated over 4 million dollars in debt. Like Mulder said - "I want to believe." Man, if he's throwing the interpreter under the bus, he's worse than Rose. Maybe I'm naive, but I believe Showtime. Mizuhara has a criminal record, and this isn't his first rodeo. Watching the game right now, fans are also on Showtime's side, as he gets the loudest cheers. Meanwhile our guys are in a 4-0 hole. Stoney pitched a pretty good 4.1 innings, 4 Ks, 1 BB and 4 H. He had a bad 2nd inning, when Logan O"Hoffe hit a 3 run bomb. But Gavin pulled himself together and did very well otherwise. Sadly, Reid Detmers is pitching a better game. IT's baseball and it happens.
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Post by Blunashun on Mar 26, 2024 15:29:02 GMT
Dodgers' Walker Buehler: Fires four sim innings Rotowire 11 HRS AGO Buehler (elbow) threw four simulated innings before Monday's exhibition against the Angels, Eric Stephen of SBNation.com reports.
Buehler won't be ready for Opening Day, but he continues to move in a promising direction. Manager Dave Roberts noted that the right-hander is "close" to being sent out on a rehab assignment, though he'll need to bounce back well from Monday's outing and toss a side session later in the week before a decision is made on when that might be. "He's been through the rehab process, facing his own hitters, the simulated games quite a bit over the last year," said Roberts. "I think he's sort of over it." The team should know more about the next steps for Buehler once he throws his next bullpen.
Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani: Cleared for throwing program Rotowire 12 HRS AGO Ohtani (elbow) played catch Monday for the first time since undergoing Tommy John surgery last September, Dylan Hernandez of the Los Angeles Times reports.
Ohtani was spotted throwing in the outfield following a scheduled press conference Monday afternoon to address the formal investigation into the matter involving his former interpreter, Ippei Mizuhara, where Ohtani denied knowledge of Mizuhara using his money to place bets with an allegedly illegal bookmaker and voiced his full cooperation with the investigation, per Sportsnet LA. "I never bet on baseball or any other sports, or never have asked somebody to do it on my behalf," said Ohtani. "And I have never went through a bookmaker to bet on sports. Up until a couple days ago, I didn't know this was happening." As for Ohtani's rehab from elbow surgery, the team previously indicated that he'd begin a throwing program upon returning to Los Angeles, and if all goes well, he could have an outside shot to play in the outfield or at first base later in the season.
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