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Omaha Steve

(107,828 posts)
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 02:56 PM Nov 9

MLB pitchers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz charged with taking bribes to rig pitches for bettors

Source: AP

Updated 1:37 PM CST, November 9, 2025
Leer en español

NEW YORK (AP) — Two Major League Baseball pitchers were indicted Sunday on charges they took bribes to give sports bettors advance notice of the types of pitches they’d throw and intentionally tossed balls instead of strikes to ensure successful bets.

Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz, both of whom pitched for the Cleveland Guardians, have been on non-disciplinary paid leave since July while Major League Baseball investigated unusually high in-game betting activity when they pitched.

Clase, 27, and Ortiz, 26, were both charged with wire fraud conspiracy, honest services wire fraud conspiracy, conspiracy to influence sporting contests by bribery and money laundering conspiracy. The top charges carry a potential punishment of up to 20 years in prison in the event of a conviction.

Ortiz was arrested by the FBI on Sunday morning at Boston Logan International Airport. He is expected to appear in federal court in Boston on Monday.



Read more: https://apnews.com/article/mlb-baseball-gambling-ortiz-clase-a6db1ff46523e2ffa16d84ca427cf7c1

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MLB pitchers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz charged with taking bribes to rig pitches for bettors (Original Post) Omaha Steve Nov 9 OP
Collusion is never a good thing FakeNoose Nov 9 #1
The precedent set from the 1919 Black Sox scandal Justice Brandeis Nov 9 #2
As it should be. paleotn Nov 9 #5
They rigged it and bet on it big time and thought nobody would notice? Well either I am wrong or ? twodogsbarking Nov 9 #3
How the heck would that work? LudwigPastorius Nov 9 #4
Micro-betting is a thing... GJGCA Nov 9 #8
Yes, but how would the pitchers indicate to the bettors what pitch they were about to throw? LudwigPastorius Nov 9 #9
A wink or a nod .. GJGCA Nov 9 #11
_ LudwigPastorius Nov 9 #13
Why? RandySF Nov 9 #6
They threw away their careers for this. Diamond_Dog Nov 9 #7
Hard to believe. Clase blew his chance at enormous wealth. Auggie Nov 9 #12
I will never understand it. Diamond_Dog Nov 9 #14
Partially True. Closers in general don't get big money contracts for as long of terms as starting pitchers Wiz Imp Nov 9 #16
Mariano Rivera deserved a lot more Polybius Nov 9 #17
Rivera apparently earned a total of approximately $170 million over 18 seasons Wiz Imp Nov 9 #18
He was so good, he deserved more Polybius Nov 9 #19
Partially true? Dead-on-balls accurate ... Auggie Nov 9 #23
Aren't you just the smartest guy in the world? Wiz Imp Nov 9 #30
Maybe it's not just money. LisaM Nov 9 #20
It's looking like professional sports, generally, are infested with gambling collusion Ponietz Nov 9 #10
Same thing the NBA player was arrested Deminpenn Nov 9 #15
It doesn't help that the announcers freaking dissect every pitch. LisaM Nov 9 #21
It's sometimes tedioius listening to the announcers I will admit FakeNoose Nov 9 #25
This beaks my heart. MontanaMama Nov 9 #22
If The Thing and his clowns and some SROTUS memers do, why not pitchers? Wonder Why Nov 9 #24
This is so true! The sport of baseball needs to remain clean of the possibility of gambling FakeNoose Nov 9 #27
Gambling is for suckers (n/t) PJMcK Nov 9 #26
SCOTUS opened the gates of corruption RVN VET71 Nov 9 #28
Already making $ each of us can only dream of wolfie001 Nov 9 #29

FakeNoose

(39,509 posts)
1. Collusion is never a good thing
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 03:07 PM
Nov 9

Even the suggestion or the possibility of collusion should be a firing offense.

Justice Brandeis

(392 posts)
2. The precedent set from the 1919 Black Sox scandal
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 03:10 PM
Nov 9

says that you need not get a guilty conviction in criminal court to bar players from baseball for throwing games.

LudwigPastorius

(13,825 posts)
4. How the heck would that work?
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 03:30 PM
Nov 9

Would there be an agreement beforehand that "the fourth pitch of the third batter I face will be a ball", or were they giving in-game signs of their next pitch visible on TV?

GJGCA

(165 posts)
8. Micro-betting is a thing...
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 03:59 PM
Nov 9

... AI result:

Micro betting is a form of wagering that allows bettors to place rapid, real-time bets on specific moments during a game. Unlike traditional betting, which focuses on overall outcomes, micro-betting enables fans to engage with every play, shot, or pitch.

LudwigPastorius

(13,825 posts)
9. Yes, but how would the pitchers indicate to the bettors what pitch they were about to throw?
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 04:06 PM
Nov 9

GJGCA

(165 posts)
11. A wink or a nod ..
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 04:09 PM
Nov 9

...to someone with a Smartwatch is the variant I've read.

Or just directly from a Smartwatch.

Auggie

(32,723 posts)
12. Hard to believe. Clase blew his chance at enormous wealth.
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 04:11 PM
Nov 9

He would gave been a free agent in 2027 at the age of 29 and could have named his own price. $15 - $18 million a year?

He's earned about $12 million in his career with Cleveland.

https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/c/claseem01.shtml

Wiz Imp

(8,180 posts)
16. Partially True. Closers in general don't get big money contracts for as long of terms as starting pitchers
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 05:21 PM
Nov 9

Last edited Sun Nov 9, 2025, 07:01 PM - Edit history (1)

and position players.

The biggest contract ever signed by a closer is Edwin Díaz'$102 million, five-year deal with the New York Mets, signed in November 2022. Diaz was 28 at the time.

https://fansided.com/posts/richest-relief-pitcher-contracts-ever-given-out-in-mlb-history-01hhjjezw66b
Richest relief pitcher contracts ever given out in MLB history
Player name Contract
Edwin Diaz $102 million
Aroldis Chapman$86 million
Kenley Jansen $80 million
Mark Melancon $62 million

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/mlb/2025/05/11/highest-paid-mlb-relief-pitchers-2025/82772196007/
Who are the highest-paid MLB relief pitchers in 2025?
(In present-day value calculated by MLB)

Josh Hader, Astros: $19,000,000
Edwin Diaz, Mets: $18,331,014
Raisel Iglesias, Braves: $16,000,000
Ryan Pressly, Cubs: $14,100,000
Kirby Yates, Dodgers: $13,000,000
Tanner Scott, Dodgers: $ 12,141,009
Taylor Rogers, Reds: $12,000,000
Rafael Montero, Astros: $11,500,000
A.J. Minter, Mets: $11,000,000
Aroldis Chapman, Red Sox: $10,750,000

Wiz Imp

(8,180 posts)
18. Rivera apparently earned a total of approximately $170 million over 18 seasons
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 07:00 PM
Nov 9

His highest annual salary was $15 million (2008 thru 2012). In 2012, 29 players earned a higher salary than Rivera.

Polybius

(21,185 posts)
19. He was so good, he deserved more
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 07:02 PM
Nov 9

At least can can say that no one else but him was elected to the HOF unanimously.

Auggie

(32,723 posts)
23. Partially true? Dead-on-balls accurate ...
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 08:34 PM
Nov 9

Clase had been one of the best, most consistent relievers in baseball. Mets, Dodgers, Yankees, et al would have willingly signed him to the numbers I quoted.

Wiz Imp

(8,180 posts)
30. Aren't you just the smartest guy in the world?
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 10:06 PM
Nov 9

I bow to your intelligence.

In reality, his current contract runs through the 2026 season, and there are $10 million team options for both 2027 & 2028. And many closers have notoriously short terms of peak value" So, no, he was in no position to get an $18 million a year contract any time soon.

You were about as "Dead-on-balls accurate" as Trump is when talking about anything involving numbers.

LisaM

(29,423 posts)
20. Maybe it's not just money.
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 07:25 PM
Nov 9

Maybe their families are being threatened. Who knows?

I think it's really important to get legalized gambling out of sports. Prop betting just makes it worse.

Ponietz

(4,173 posts)
10. It's looking like professional sports, generally, are infested with gambling collusion
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 04:08 PM
Nov 9

Betting for money was illegal for so long for good reason. Along comes the internet and anything goes. I watch soccer and the influx of dirty Saudi oil money has poisoned the game. Officials are most suspect because they make little compared to the players.

LisaM

(29,423 posts)
21. It doesn't help that the announcers freaking dissect every pitch.
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 07:29 PM
Nov 9

Then they gabble about exit velocity and how many fouls in a row and blather one seemingly useless stat after another to the point where it doesn't even seem that they are following the game as a whole. And I suppose there are prop bettors hanging on every stat.

I grew up listening to baseball in the radio and they would just say things like "a low fastball in the dirt" and that was just perfect.

FakeNoose

(39,509 posts)
25. It's sometimes tedioius listening to the announcers I will admit
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 08:49 PM
Nov 9

... but I don't think that had anything to do with these professional players who threw away their careers for a few bucks.

They're both going to be banned from baseball, is my guess. That's what happened to Pete Rose (and others), who never got into the Hall of Fame where he should have ended up. These young men were stupid and misguided....

I don't know maybe there's something I'm missing here? Why didn't they have more regard for their future careers?

Wonder Why

(6,378 posts)
24. If The Thing and his clowns and some SROTUS memers do, why not pitchers?
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 08:42 PM
Nov 9

We have become a country full of billionaire bribe offerers and wannabe billionaire bribe takers.

Soon, police forces and judges all over will become like it was during Prohibition. Everyone on the take or offering it.

I don't take bribes unless they are made of dark chocolate!

FakeNoose

(39,509 posts)
27. This is so true! The sport of baseball needs to remain clean of the possibility of gambling
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 08:59 PM
Nov 9

There can't be any chance of collusion, and that's why these players were so short-sighted by getting involved.

I'm not saying they are guilty, because I really hope they aren't. But the problem with baseball is that there can't be any possibility of collusion. All the players know this. Anyone who ignores the safeguards is throwing away their career. These guys knew it and they did it anyway. Was is worth the risk? I doubt it. Just ask Pete Rose.

RVN VET71

(3,099 posts)
28. SCOTUS opened the gates of corruption
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 09:42 PM
Nov 9

The resultant ruination of sports by "gambling interests" was inevitable. Shit, FANDUEL and a host of other "companies" aren't in the business of keeping sports honest.

As a result all the big leagues are going to rot and die. Baseball, Basketball (even the WNBA, maybe especially WNBA), the NFL. None is immune.

A damned shame; and I lay it all on SCOTUS. It made it all possible -- made it all probable.

And it upsets me. I just don't watch it anymore, any of it, because I don't believe it anymore.

wolfie001

(6,550 posts)
29. Already making $ each of us can only dream of
Sun Nov 9, 2025, 10:04 PM
Nov 9

No sympathy. Pathetic. The 1919 scandal the players were paid dirt salaries. These guys are making hand-over-fist even when they're run-of-the-mill talents. Crazy stupid.

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