MLB made Carlos BeltraÌn a scapegoat. The Hall of Fame calls anyway.
- - MLB made Carlos BeltraÌn a scapegoat. The Hall of Fame calls anyway.
Bob Nightengale, USA TODAYJanuary 15, 2026 at 5:06 AM
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The Houston Astros cheating scandal is now eight years old, and while bitterness and anger still lingers in certain cities and players from that 2017 team still are booed, most resentment stems from the fact there was no real discipline or serious repercussions.
Former Astros players from Alex Bregman to George Springer became rich and famous after hitting the free agent market.
Former Astros manager AJ Hinch is lauded as a savant leading the Detroit Tigers through a turnaround. Former Houston bench coach Alex Cora is worshipped in Boston.
The Astros remain a power, dominating the AL West since 2017 with seven division titles, four American League pennants and two World Series titles.
Really, only one person has ever paid the price.
Carlos BeltrĂĄn.
BeltrĂĄn, whose career was stellar and was revered off the field, had his baseball life turned upside down.
Carlos Beltran spent seven seasons with the Mets.
He was so highly regarded that he was hired to manage the New York Mets just two years after his playing career, only to be fired before managing a single game in the aftermath of the cheating investigation.
He was one of the greatest switch-hitters in baseball history, a recipient of the Roberto Clemente Award for his philanthropic endeavors, but was snubbed three consecutive times in the annual Hall of Fame elections.
Now, BeltrĂĄn's punishment finally is on the threshold of ending.
BeltrĂĄn is expected to finally be elected into the hallowed grounds of the Baseball Hall of Fame on Tuesday, Jan. 20 when the election results are announced.
BeltrĂĄn is appearing on 90% of the Baseball Writers' Association of America ballots according to Ryan Thibodauxâs Hall of Fame ballot tracker. It looks like he's going to coast and join second baseman Jeff Kent, who was elected in December via the contemporary era committee, along with possibly center fielder Andruw Jones.
It was absurd that he was singled out among all of his teammates in the investigation. He wasnât the GM. He wasnât the manager. Not a coach.
He was simply a veteran player who was part of the development of the scheme. The Astros used a center-field camera to relay catcherâs signs to a monitor behind the dugout, which alerted the hitter by banging on a trash can.
The players were given had the option of accepting the signs, or disregarding them. If players didnât want to participate, that was fine too. All-Star second baseman Jose Altuve never took part, his teammates insist, but no one wants to hear it. He still is taunted and incessantly booed on the road.
Itâs ridiculous to think that the Astros were the only team stealing signs. The Yankees and Red Sox were caught relaying signals with their Apple watches and dugout phones, too, and only had their wrists slapped. Other teams had hidden cameras and used similar techniques to the Astros.
The Astros affair just happened to be the only team who had a whistle-blower: pitcher Mike Fiers.
âA lot of people always ask me why you didnât stop it,â BeltrĂĄn told the YES network when he was hired in 2022 as an analyst. âAnd my answer is, I didnât stop it the same way no one stopped it. This is working for us. Why you going to stop something that is working for you?
âSo, if the organization wouldâve said something to us, we would have stopped it for sure.â
It was cruel that BeltrĂĄn lost his managerial job. He was out of the game â other than broadcasting â until 2023 when the Mets hired him as a special assistant in the front office. They just didnât want him on the field, with former Mets manager Buck Showalter even forbidden to interview him for a coaching job.
âWe grow from moments that are tough," BeltrĂĄn said when he was hired as a front office assistant. âIn life, a lot of times when you're going through a big storm, you think that storm will never pass.
âBut it will pass. Time heals."
And those wounds should heal Tuesday, Jan. 20, the moment he hears his name announced by Hall of Fame president Josh Rawitch.
And no, BeltrĂĄnâs Hall of Fame election should not be tainted in the least.
Did he illegally steal signs? Yep.
But how much did he reap the benefits? He had the worst season of his 20-year career, hitting .231 with 14 homers, 51 RBIs and a .666 OPS.
So please, enough talk about BeltrĂĄnâs election tarnishing the purity of the Hall of Fame.
You donât think the Hall of Fame is filled with pitchers who used spitballs, scuffed baseballs with sandpaper and tacks, and used Vaseline? You may want to Google Gaylord Perry.
You donât think the Hall of Fame is filled with hitters who stole signs with the help of their teammates or team employees?
You donât think there are players in the Hall of Fame who used performance-enhancing drugs? And guess who was never, ever, linked to PEDs at any time in his career? That would be BeltrĂĄn.
1 / 25Top 25 MLB players from 2000-2025 ranked by Wins Above ReplacementSince 2000, future Hall of Famer Albert Pujols' 101.3 Wins Above Replacement (WAR) leads all players, with Alex Rodriguez tied for second ways back at 89.7 WAR. See the rest of the top 25.Carlos BeltrĂĄn Hall of Fame stats
BeltrĂĄn was one of the finest all-around players in MLB history. Heâs the only switch-hitter to produce more than 2,500 hits (2,725), hit more than 400 homers (435), and steal 300 bases (312). BeltrĂĄn joins Hall of Famers Willie Mays and Andre Dawson, along with Barry Bonds and Alex Rodriguez, as the only players with 2,500 hits, 400 homers and 300 stolen bases. He was also a brilliant base-stealer, successful in 86.4% of his attempts âthe best among all players with at least 200 career steals since 1920.
The nine-time All-Star and three-time Gold Glove winner led five different teams to the playoffs. His postseason slash line of.307/.412/.609 is eclipsed only by Babe Ruth, and his 1.021 OPS that ranks eighth among players with at least 100 postseason plate appearances.
He was a fabulous all-around player on the field, a role model in the clubhouse, and still has a huge impact off the field. BeltrĂĄn helped fund $10 million for the Carlos BeltrĂĄn Baseball Academy in Puerto Rico, a bilingual high school that blends baseball training with academics to prepare students for college or professional careers.
âGod gave me an opportunity to make a good living in baseball," BeltrĂĄn said several years ago when visiting the Hall of Fame with his family. But when I think about legacy, I donât think about numbers. I think about the impact on the community and on society.
âFor me, thatâs the legacy.â
Sure, Beltran regrets being an integral part of the Astrosâ illegal sign-stealing scheme. He wishes it never happened. He knew teams were illegally stealing signs, and wanted to keep up with the other technology-savvy teams.
He and his teammates took it too far, and he deeply regrets being part of it. He paid the price, more than anyone else in the organization.
Now, itâs his time to be rewarded.
Beltran is a Hall of Famer and will have a plaque in Cooperstown where everyone can recognize and remember him for his greatness.
If you want to remember the cheating scandal of 2017 too, go ahead â but this is his day to forever cherish.
Thereâs no need to spoil it.
Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Carlos Beltran set for Hall of Fame but MLB made him scandal scapegoat
Source: âAOL Sportsâ