The penalties from Tuesday night’s brawl were handed down, and MLB delivered a harsh ruling. Cade Cavalli and Willson Contreras were each suspended 7 games, while Miles Mikolas got 5 and Nate Eaton got 3. The 7 games for Cavalli, who did not throw a punch or get physical during the confrontation, feels harsh.
In case you forgot, the Nats and Red Sox got into a major brawl the other day. After Cade Cavalli was upset that Contreras cut him off on his way to the dugout, he let him hear it after he struck out the first baseman. Cavalli painted a breaking ball on the outside corner, and told Contreras “sit down boy”.
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The language Cavalli used was not very tasteful, especially considering the fact that Contreras is a person of color. Yesterday, Cavalli apologized for that language, saying he did not understand the connotations of using the term boy in that way. Paul Toboni also chimed in, saying that he spoke with Cavalli. Both said that he will eliminate that “boy” term from his vocabulary.
However, it just feels like the punishment does not fit the crime here. Seven games is a long suspension. I understand that it is different with a starting pitcher, but Cavalli still is not getting paid for those 7 games when he otherwise would. That is something that the MLBPA is not going to be happy about.
When you look at previous suspensions for language, the punishments have been much lighter. Players like Jarren Duran and Yuli Gurriel got fewer games for using or doing much more openly bigoted things. Duran only got two games for yelling a homophobic slur, while Gurriel got 5 for openly mocking the appearance of Asian people in the dugout. Should Cavalli have said what he did? No, but the punishment does not fit the crime here.
While considering pitchers and position players are a slightly different animal, the MLB is setting a pretty wild precedent here. Cavalli is being suspended without pay for the same amount of time as Contreras who charged the mound, used his helmet as a weapon and threatened a fan on social media. That seems pretty extreme if you ask me.
If I were Cavalli’s agent, I would certainly be telling him to appeal this. The appeal system is highly unlikely to hold up that level of suspension. At most, the suspension should be five games to where Cavalli misses one start. Where those other two games are coming from beats me.
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Once again, I am not excusing his language or actions, but this penalty is over the top. Cavalli did not even get thrown out of that game, and now he has the same penalty as Contreras?
I understand my bias here, but this just feels like a situation where a hefty fine is the best option. The longest suspension you could convince me on is 5 games. Again, this is just my opinion, but when you look at the precedent things are clear. Cavalli did not throw a punch (or a helmet), but he is getting the same percentage of his paycheck docked as Contreras.
