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Games in Fukushima at Tokyo 2020 Does not Pose Health Risk, WBSC President Claims

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Games in Fukushima at Tokyo 2020 Does not Pose Health Risk, WBSC President Claims
World Baseball Softball Confederation (WBSC) President Riccardo Fraccari has insisted staging games in Fukushima at Tokyo 2020 will not pose any health risk to the players as he prepares to inspect several proposed venues. Photo: Twitter/WBSC

World Baseball Softball Confederation (WBSC) President Riccardo Fraccari has insisted staging matches in Fukushima at Tokyo 2020 will not pose any health risk to the players as he prepares to inspect several proposed venues.

Tokyo 2020 organizers gave the green light to baseball and softball contests being held in Fukushima, which was struck by one of the worst natural disasters to hit Japan back in 2011, earlier this month.

A devastating earthquake and tsunami caused a nuclear accident at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant and around 16,000 people lost their lives in the tragedy.

Japanese policemen search for bodies in the area devastated by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Minamisoma, inside the 20-kilometer (12-mile) evacuation zone, in Fukushima Prefecture. Photo: AP Photo, https://sputniknews.com/analysis/201508201025992771/
Japanese policemen search for bodies in the area devastated by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Minamisoma, inside the 20-kilometer (12-mile) evacuation zone, in Fukushima Prefecture. Photo: AP Photo, https://sputniknews.com/analysis/201508201025992771/

The area is still affected by the disaster today, with reports earlier this year claiming contaminated water continues to leak from the plant.

Concerns over nuclear leakage was a major challenge for Tokyo in the final weeks of their successful bid for the Olympics in September 2013.

A leaking pipe and several radioactive “hotspots” were found.

Fears among voting International Olympic Committee (IOC) members were only allayed by impressive reassurances from Japanese Prime Minister Shinzō Abe and Princess Hisako of Takamado during the IOC Session in Buenos Aires, where Tokyo was awarded the 2020 Games.

Abe and IOC President Thomas Bach discussed holding sport in Fukushima during the German’s visit to the Japanese capital last month.

But it is thought safety concerns remain within the baseball and softball community about holding games there.

Fraccari, who will visit a number of potential venues for the sport’s Olympic return tomorrow, stressed, however, that he was not concerned over hosting matches in the region, considered a major boost to the region’s redevelopment following the incident.

The WBSC held an Under-15 Baseball World Cup in Fukushima in July and August.

“From the data received, the situation is not dangerous in Fukushima,” Fraccari said at a press conference, as reported by the Japan Times.

“The situation is fine now so I don’t think we will have any problems three years on.

“We just staged the under-15 tournament in Fukushima and I know how passionate the people there are about baseball.

“The main issues for me are the facilities and the schedule.”

Tokyo 2020 sports director Koji Murofushi confirmed to insidethegames that a final decision on whether to host matches in Fukushima rests with the WBSC.

Fraccari has also claimed no decision will be made until he has visited the area.

The issue is likely to be discussed by the IOC Executive Board during its meeting in Lausanne next month.

By Liam Morgan

Republished with permission from insidethegames.biz

Fasel Remains Hopeful Over NHL Participation at Pyeongchang 2018 After Latest Meeting

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Fasel Remains Hopeful Over NHL Participation at Pyeongchang 2018 After Latest Meeting
Goalkeeper Henrik Lundqvist. Photo: Petr David Josek/AP/CP

Limited progress appears to have been achieved in discussions over National Hockey League (NHL) participation at Pyeongchang 2018 following another series of key meetings between stakeholders in New York City.

Representatives from the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF), NHL and NHL Players’ Association (NHLPA) and both the Canadian and United States national governing bodies came together for what was hailed as another important step on the path to a final decision expected in January.

A dispute continues over who will pay transportation and insurance costs which had previously been covered by the IOC.

“It’s not a big progress, but we will get there,” said IIHF President René Fasel afterwards.

“Nobody said it would be easy.”

Fasel estimates these costs will come to around $10 million due to the long flights involved.

He claimed he will be able to raise the money himself through IIHF funds and by soliciting help within the ice hockey and from other supporters.

But the NHL representatives are thought to have warned them that they do not want funds to be taken from other ice hockey development projects.

Most players are thought to want to play, but powerful club owners are believed to be far less enthusiastic.

Time does remain to reach a deal, however,.

An agreement was reached for Sochi 2014 just seven months before the Opening Ceremony.

Website Sportsnet has also reported that the NHL could allow participation in return for NHLPA approval for an extension to their collective bargaining agreement.

This was last negotiated during a strike that led to almost half of the 2012-2013 season being missed and is due to expire in 2022.

Both the NHL and NHLPA can opt out in 2020, meaning Olympic participation could be used as a bargaining tool.

By Nick Butler

Republished with permission from insidethegames.biz

Los Angeles Voters Approve $120 Billion Transit Overhaul with Eyes on Olympics

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Los Angeles Voters Approve $120 Billion Transit Overhaul with Eyes on Olympics
Los Angeles County voters recently approved $120 billion in public transit improvements, including upgrades to the Metro rail system. Photo: Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles County voters approved a transformative $120 billion transit overhaul which will deliver new rail lines, bus services and highway improvements, highlighting the implications of the largest mass transit upgrade program in the United States for fast, convenient and well-connected transport options in 2024.

Journey times from the Olympic family hotels within the LA 2024 Downtown Sports Park to the beach volleyball venue on Santa Monica Beach or the Olympic Village at UCLA, for example, would be just 25 minutes. And while LA 2024 will benefit from the new development, all transport infrastructure upgrades are planned and funded independently of the Olympic bid.

Said Mayor Eric Garcetti said, “Seventy percent of this county said we are sick and tired of traffic and we’re going to do something about it. The car capital of the world will soon be home to a transit system that is the envy of the world.”

This story first appeared in the blog, The Sport Intern. The editor is Karl-Heinz Huba of Lorsch, Germany. He can be reached at [email protected]. The article is reprinted here with permission of Huba.

Sixteen Athletes Sanctioned After Positive Retests from Beijing 2008

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Sixteen Athletes Sanctioned After Positive Retests from Beijing 2008
Khasan Baroev will be stripped of his silver medal from the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. Photo: SkySports.com

Another 16 athletes have been sanctioned by the International Olympic Committee (IOC), following positive retests from the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.

The latest batch of sanctioned athletes includes three silver and nine bronze medalists from the Games.

Five athletes from Kazakhstan have been sanctioned, along with four Russians, three Ukrainians, two Azeris and one competitor from Belarus and Greece respectively.

Of those sanctioned, nine are weightlifters, four come from athletics and three from wrestling.

A total of 47 athletes have now been officially sanctioned by the IOC following the recent retests from Beijing 2008.

Irina Nekrassova is one of the three athletes to be requested to return a silver medal she claimed at Beijing 2008, with the Kazakh under 63 kilogram weightlifter having tested positive for the banned substance stanozolol.

Her failure means a medal has now been stripped from at least one athlete in each of the women’s seven weightlifting events at Beijing 2008, with the two heaviest categories seeing a pair of medals removed.

Azerbaijan’s Vitaliy Rahimov and Russia’s Khasan Baroev both tested positive for dehydrochlormethyltestosterone and the pair are set to lose their under 60kg and 120kg Greco-Roman wrestling silver medals.

Two Russian weightlifters are to be stripped of bronze medals after testing positive for the same substance.

Khadzhimurat Akkaev and Dmitry Lapikov had finished as the runners-up in the men’s 94kg and 105kg events at the Games.

Ukraine’s Natalya Davydova and Kazakhstan’s Mariya Grabovetskaya also tested positive for dehydrochlormethyltestosterone and will lose their women’s 69kg and over 75kg weightlifting bronze medals.

Grabovetskaya sample also contained the substances oxandrolone and stanozolol.

Kazakhstan’s under 96kg Greco-Roman wrestling bronze medalist Asset Mambetov.

Greek triple jumper Chrysopigi Devetzi, the Athens 2004 silver medalist, failed for stanozolol.

She had already been stripped of the Olympic bronze medal she won at Beijing 2008 having tested positive for stanozolol following a retest from the 2007 International Association of Athletics Federations World Championships in Osaka.

Her subsequent results for the next four years were annulled.

Ukrainian pole vaulter Denys Yurchenko tested positive for dehydrochlormethyltestosterone and will also be stripped of his bronze medal.

Several competitors who did not win medals are also among those sanctioned.

Weightlifters Maya Maneza and Vladimir Sedov from Kazakhstan are among the non-medalists to be disqualified, with the pair testing positive for stanozolol.

Maneza, who pulled out of Beijing 2008 ahead of her event, has already been stripped of an Olympic gold medal from London 2012.

Sedov finished fourth in the men’s 85kg event.

They are joined by Belarus’ Iryna Kulesha, fourth in the women’s 75kg event, and Azerbaijan’s fifth place finisher in the men’s 94kg competition, Nizami Pashayev.

Both tested positive for dehydrochlormethyltestosterone, with Pashayev also being caught for oxandrolone and stanozolol.

Russia’s Elena Slesarenko and Ukraine’s Vita Palamar, fourth and fifth in the women’s high jump, failed for dehydrochlormethyltestosterone.

The positive tests come as the International Olympic Committee (IOC) continue to re-analyse frozen samples from both Beijing 2008 and London 2012 using new techniques not available at the time.

By Michael Pavitt

Republished with permission from insidethegames.biz

WADA to Propose System of Sanctions at Foundation Board Meeting, Risk More Conflict with IOC

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WADA to Propose System of Sanctions at Foundation Board Meeting, Risk More Conflict with IOC
World Anti-Doping Agency President Craig Reedie speaks to the media following a WADA meeting in Montreal, Thursday, May 12, 2016. Photo: Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press via AP

A proposal for a graded system of sanctions for organisations deemed non-compliant with the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) will be considered at the Foundation Board meeting  in Glasgow on Sunday, November 20.

A two-day meeting of Government representatives began today in London to formulate their responses ahead of a session considered a vital step in plans to reform the global anti-doping body.

insidethegames has been told that a “graded system of sanctioning powers” will be considered in order to allow “proportionate and meaningful” decisions that will “compel and motivate signatories.”

A system consisting of three differing levels of offences will be considered.

This will begin with low level administrative problems relating to procedural issues threatening compliance with the World Anti-Doping Code.

A second medium level will consist of more serious problems with anti-doping procedures such as testing or educational schemes.

The most serious faults such as the Government interference and direct manipulation of the system seen alleged in Russia in recent years make up the third group.

Sanctions will rise from warnings to escalating fines to, in the most serious cases, a suspension of athletes’ eligibility to compete in a specific event.

This marks a departure from the current system in which WADA can make recommendations but has no specific sanctioning power.

The idea is likely to be met with hostility in the Olympic Movement after it was specifically criticized here during yesterday’s Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC) General Assembly.

WADA President Sir Craig Reedie came under attack from ANOC President Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah for the timing of its decision to suspend the accreditation of the Doha Laboratory on the eve of the meeting beginning here on Tuesday, November 15.

Their proposal for a blanket ban preventing Russian athletes from competing at Rio 2016 following publication of the McLaren Report, alleging state-sponsored doping in the country, was also criticized.

Sir Craig received a barrage of criticism from delegates before a resolution was passed calling for a “neutral” WADA President.

“What is the objective of WADA?” Spanish Olympic Committee Alejandro Blanco asked.

“It must not be to tell sports institutions what they should be doing, like telling the IOC to sanction all Russian athletes.”

International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach has repeatedly insisted that he does not support “the prosecutor also being the judge.”

WADA’s Foundation Board is currently represented by figures from sporting bodies and governing authorities on a 50-50 basis.

The views of the latter group formulated during the London meeting will be crucial.

“It is vital that Governments, the Olympic and Paralympic movements, International Sport Federations, coaches and athletes work closely together to unequivocally reaffirm the uncompromising principles of clean sport and support WADA as a central agent in dealing with the complex doping issues in the dynamic and challenging environment we all live in,” Canadian Minister of Sport and Persons with Disabilities Carla Qualtrough wrote in a Huffington Post editorial today.

Key priorities she highlighted included “improving WADA’s capacity to conduct and follow up on investigations”, “providing policy support to encourage, protect, and engage whistleblowers”, “strengthening the agency’s governance” and “increasing power and funding”.

“Implementing a more rigorous monitoring process for WADA accredited laboratories and stronger requirements for them to operate autonomously” was also cited by Qualtrough, along with making improvements to security systems in order to protect information.

The Foundation Board meeting will take place at the Scottish Exhibition and Conference Center in Glasgow on Sunday.

It will be fully open to the media and public to attend.

By Nick Butler

Republished with permission from insidethegames.biz

Paris 2024 Bid Inspired by ‘Olympic Values’

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Paris 2024 Bid Inspired by ‘Olympic Values’
Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo. Photo: AFP Photo/Francois Guillot

“The presentation of Paris 2024 is about a bid inspired by Olympic values, led by sport and athletes and powered by the collective energy and will of France’s national sports movement,” said France’s National Olympic Committee President Denis Masseglia opening the city’s presentation to the world’s National Olympic Committees at the Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC) General Assembly in Doha, Qatar. “It is this energy that we will put at your service with Paris 2024, which will allow us to respond to your needs and those of your athletes, and which today sees us launch the Paris 2024 ‘NOC and NPC Declaration’. It sets out the outstanding service you will receive… And together, in partnership with you, we want to develop these ideas further and so make 2024 an exceptional experience for each of you,“ Masseglia said.

Paris 2024 Co-Chairman, IOC Member and three-time Olympic Gold Medallist, Tony Estanguet, stated: “I’m convinced that passion and purpose must remain central to our Movement for its future success. And why Paris 2024 is built on those two key pillars: passion and purpose. I hope there can be no question about French passion, especially for sport. Olympism is in our DNA. Every Olympic and Paralympic sport has a vibrant community in our country. Since 2010, we have staged more than 40 sold out, international events in Olympic sports. “The result is a guarantee that Paris 2024 will be successful Games, which deliver… A unique experience… Magnificent TV images… And an incredible celebration, for everyone, in the very heart of Paris…“

This story first appeared in the blog, The Sport Intern. The editor is Karl-Heinz Huba of Lorsch, Germany. He can be reached at [email protected]. The article is reprinted here with permission of Huba.

Los Angeles 2024 Officials Promise a ‘Transformative Games’

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Los Angeles 2024 Officials Promise a ‘Transformative Games’
Mayor Garcetti announcing the LA Olympic Bid's Athlete's Commission. By Eric Garcetti (LA 2024) [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Making their first presentation to the Olympic family, Los Angeles 2024 officials pledged to the 1,000-plus delegates at the Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC) General Assembly in Doha, Qatar a “Transformative Games” to guarantee greater sustainability and youth connection for future Games.

Emphasizing that LA 2024’s commitment is not just to hosting an outstanding Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2024, but also to ensuring future success and relevancy for the Olympic Movement, Mayor Eric Garcetti said: “We believe our campaign isn’t just about the Games in our city in 2024. We believe this bid is about ensuring that the Games are sustainable and relevant in every year beyond 2024 as well. This bid isn’t only about LA’s future – it’s about our collective future. We are planning a great Games in Los Angeles – make no mistake – but we’re also laying the ground work along with you for future Games. “We know that LA 2024 must not only deliver great Games, they must also deliver transformative Games. And we know that we can help transform the Games because we are a transformative city that reflects creativity and innovation – and because the Olympics are in our DNA.”

Six-time Olympic champion sprinter Allyson Felix claimed America’s "diversity" is its greatest strength following last week’s Presidential election in a powerful Los Angeles 2024 Olympic and Paralympic bid presentation. Photo: http://mynewsla.com/
Six-time Olympic champion sprinter Allyson Felix claimed America’s “diversity” is its greatest strength following last week’s Presidential election in a powerful Los Angeles 2024 Olympic and Paralympic bid presentation. Photo: http://mynewsla.com/

Six-time Olympic champion sprinter Allyson Felix stressed why the diversity of America and LA in particular makes the City of Angels perfectly placed to welcome – and benefit from – the world’s greatest celebration of unity in diversity: “I want to tell you about the America that I love, and the America that needs the Games to help make our nation better – now more than ever. America is diverse. We are a nation of people whose descendants came from all over the world for a better life. We’re not a nation that clings to our past, no matter how glorious or how painful. Americans rush towards the future.

“Please don’t doubt us. America’s diversity is our greatest strength. Diversity is not easy. Diversity is a leap of faith that embraces all faiths. And that’s why I believe LA is a perfect choice for the 2024 Games, because the face of our city reflects the face of the Olympic Movement itself.”

This story first appeared in the blog, The Sport Intern. The editor is Karl-Heinz Huba of Lorsch, Germany. He can be reached at [email protected]. The article is reprinted here with permission of Huba.

Fitness Trends

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Fitness Trends
Yoga, body postures specific for health and relaxation, is a fitness trend. Photo: http://adayawaysalonandspa.com/

The American College of Sports Medicine recently announced their top 10 fitness trends for 2017. Accordingly, these trends are as follows…

  • Wearable technology (including smart watches, heart rate monitors, activity trackers, and GPS tracking devices
  • Body weight training (not limited to pushups and pullups, and allows people to get back to the basics of fitness)
  • High-Intensity Interval Training (short bursts of activity followed by short rest; performed in less than 30 minutes)

    Hiring an educated and experienced fitness professional is a current trend in fitness. Photo: wellandgood.com
    Hiring an educated and experienced fitness professional is a current trend in fitness. Photo: wellandgood.com
  • Educated and experienced fitness professionals
  • Strength training (other essential components are aerobic exercise and flexibility)

    Wearable fitness technology. Photo: forbes.com
    Wearable fitness technology. Photo: forbes.com
  • Group training (designed to be motivating and effective for people at different fitness levels)
  • Exercise is medicine (encourages primary care physicians to include physical activity when designing treatment plans for patients)
  • Yoga (body postures specific for health and relaxation)
  • Personal training (trained and credentialed specialists administer health and fitness guidance)
  • Exercise and weight loss (nutrition, exercise, and caloric restriction for better weight control

    Fitness trends include exercise and weight loss, nutrition, exercise, and caloric restriction for better weight control. Photo: public domain
    Fitness trends include exercise and weight loss, nutrition, exercise, and caloric restriction for better weight control. Photo: public domain

Source:

Tipping, E. (2016). ACSM Forecasts Fitness Trends for 2017, Recreation Management, November, 2016, pp. 8 – 9.

By Dr. Rodney J. Blackman

Dr. Blackman is the Chair of Recreation Management at the United States Sports Academy, and can be reached at [email protected].

Play Multiple Sports and Become an Athlete

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Play Multiple Sports and Become an Athlete
Photo: Brett Myers/Youth Radio

It is beyond me why a coach would tell players that it is alright to play multiple sports at a young age, then, in the very next sentence state that they have to understand that their skills will be behind players that only play that sport year round. This is very contradictory to young impressionable young players. This is a major problem in youth and school aged sports today.

Nightengale: MLB Finds Diversity it Seeks Elusive

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Nightengale: MLB Finds Diversity it Seeks Elusive
Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred. Photo: AP Photo/David J. Phillip

Major League Baseball, frustrated that their managerial and GM vacancies this winter were filled without a single minority hired from outside an organization, revealed Thursday that it has dumped Korn Ferry as their leadership search firm.

They now are taking matters into their own hands.

Oh, and is it ever time.

There were so many conflicts of interest with Korn Ferry as baseball’s search firm that it resulted in nothing more than friends hiring friends. Mostly all the hires had backgrounds with the Cleveland Indians, or had a relationship with Toronto Blue Jayspresident Mark Shapiro, the Indians’ former president and GM.

“The Korn Ferry relationship on minority hiring, we’ve really shifted,’’ Commissioner Rob Manfred said at the owners’  meetings. “Their involvement at the industry level is going to be curtailed on these types of projects because, as we went along in the process, we came to realize there’s a potential for conflicts when they’re doing searches and doing work for us centrally.’’

Indeed, the idea that Korn Ferry would assist in minorities being identified, and eventually hired, was a farce.

The Minnesota Twins hired Derek Falvey, who never has led a department and had only one year of experience as the Indians’ assistant GM, as their club president. They brought in Thad Levine from Texas to be their GM. And they interviewed only one minority, Chicago Cubs vice president Jason McLeod and former Arizona senior VP of baseball operations Dejon Watson, for each position.

The Diamondbacks interviewed two minority candidates, Kim Ng and Peter Woodfork for their vacant GM position, before turning to Mike Hazen of the Boston Red Sox, who also started in the Cleveland organization.

The Colorado Rockies, Atlanta Braves, Diamondbacks and Chicago White Sox all hired managers this winter, but the only minority hired was Rick Renteria, who simply was promoted from White Sox bench coach to manager.

Why, no Major League Baseball club has hired a minority general manager from outside the organization since Arizona hired Dave Stewart on Sept. 25, 2014. And he was fired two years later, along with his assistant, Watson, also an African-American.

Manfred spent considerable time at the MLB owners’ meetings in Chicago imploring clubs that changes need to be made, creating a more diverse front office and managerial pool, even generating new front-office jobs.

There are currently only three minority GMs in baseball, Mike Hill of the Miami Marlins, Farhan Zaidi of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Al Avila of the Detroit Tigers. Kenny Williams of the Chicago White Sox is the lone minority president. And Dusty Baker, Dave Roberts and Renteria are the only minority managers.

“My life would be easier if the demographics of those hired were different,’’ Manfred said. “And when people have concerns about an industry-wide issue – which is what this hiring issue is – you have to have a plan for dealing with it and you have to accept responsibility for progress or lack of progress. …

“I am encouraged by the fact that I think in a lot of places clubs undertook not only a Plan A but a Plan B, in an effort to make sure we make progress on the minority hiring front. I think Atlanta’s a great example of that.’’

The Braves interviewed four minority candidates for their managerial opening – Bo Porter, Ron Washington, Terry Pendleton and Eddie Perez – but still promoted interim Brian Snitker to the full-time job. Yet, Pendleton and Perez remained on the coaching staff, Washington was hired as their third-base coach and Porter was promoted to special assistant to GM John Coppolella.

“They made the selection they felt was the best qualified person,’’ Manfred said, “but a number of those candidates then surfaced not only on their field staff but in the front office. That’s a good outcome from my perspective. I find that to be encouraging.”

Still, it’s hardly the kind of diversity baseball is looking for, and Manfred reminded the owners to comply with the Selig Rule, requiring every team to interview minority candidates for key positions. They also plan to develop a project to help identify candidates.

“We’re going to take some high profile baseball operations positions, starting with field manager,’’ Manfred said, “and try to do a study about qualifications and characteristics that may be predictive of success. I think a little science in that area may be helpful to us in terms of identifying candidates who will be particularly appealing to clubs.

“The idea is that it’s not uncommon in business for people who have a job title that’s important to them to try to determine exactly what qualifications and traits are predictive of success. It’s something we haven’t done on an industry basis and I just think it might be a useful experiment for us.”

Hey, the current system certainly isn’t working, so why not try something different?

Manfred even stepped into Kansas City last weekend, conveying his plan to the Buck O’Neil Professional Baseball Scouts & Coaches Association, telling them to keep the faith.

“The awareness to be diverse has definitely been more heightened,’’ said Tyrone Brooks, senior director of MLB’s front office and field staff diversity pipeline program. “The guys had a lot of questions. But he was very forthright talking about the industry, where we are headed, and the steps that can be taken to increase their value to clubs.’’

Meanwhile, with baseball still buoyed by a vibrant postseason, Manfred is optimistic baseball and the players union will have a new labor agreement by Dec. 1, when the current five-year deal expires. One of the stumbling blocks appears to be the owners’ hopes for an international draft, while the union remains opposed, but there’s no looming obstacle that is causing great concern, let alone threats of a work stoppage.

And, oh, yes, baseball was reminded that its popularity still remains quite strong in the two weeks since the World Series. That was evidenced Wednesday night when model/actress Kate Upton crudely criticized the Baseball Writers Association of America for voting Boston Red Sox starter Rick Porcello as the Cy Young award winner instead of her fiancée, Detroit Tigers ace Justin Verlander.

“The particular content of the tweet,’’ Manfred said, laughing, “I’m not going to comment on. I do think that engagement on social media by players and people close to players is important in today’s world. It brings attention to the sport at a point during the year when it’s the offseason and we have less going on.

“I think social media is a form of fan engagement that can be useful in terms of growing the sport.

“But, I’m not going to comment on the particular substance of that tweet.”

By Bob Nightengale

This article was republished with permission from the original publisher, USA Today. Follow Bob Nightengale on Twitter @BNightengale