
Yesterday we passed along the news that
11 current free agents were going to appear in the Mitchell Report. Naturally we cautioned GMs to be on the lookout so they didn't make the same type of commitment the Angels made to
Gary Matthews Jr., who only months later was
fingered in an HGH report. Well, only a day later, the story no longer appears on
The Boston Globe website, where it was first reported. Instead, a
New York Daily News report
denies what The Globe had said:
"I can't imagine how that story can be accurate," MLB vice president for labor relations Rob Manfred told the Daily News last night. "Only Senator Mitchell knows who's in the report. The union does not know who's named in that report - we have not notified any players of anything."
According to union counsel Gene Orza, agents might have misunderstood what was said at the agents meeting in New York on Wednesday. What the agents actually were told was that of all the players whom Mitchell has asked to interview through the Players Association, 11 currently are free agents.
"The maximum number of free agents who could wind up appearing is 11," said one union source. "Or there may be none."
Sounds to me like a misunderstanding and that The Globe got things wrong. How does this change things for teams looking to make a signing? It doesn't too much. You know going into things that there's a chance any player you sign used some sort of performance-enhancer. If you're cautious and wait until the Mitchell Report comes out, you could miss out on players. Seems like it would be in the interest of teams for this Report to come out sooner rather than later. Alas, the anticipation continues to grow.