Manipulated Pitches in 48 Games, Far Beyond Initial Claims
The scope of the gambling scandal surrounding Cleveland Guardians closer Emmanuel Clase has expanded dramatically, sending shockwaves through Major League Baseball and raising urgent questions about integrity, oversight, and trust in the sport. According to a court document filed Thursday, Clase is now accused of throwing suspicious, allegedly rigged pitches in at least 48 games over a two-year span—far more than the nine games initially identified by federal prosecutors when the indictment was unsealed last November.
The revelation came not from prosecutors themselves, but from a filing by the attorney for Luis Ortiz, a Guardians pitcher and alleged co-conspirator in the case. In a strategic move aimed at separating his client’s legal fate from Clase’s, Ortiz’s attorney, Christos N. Georgalis, argued that the government is accusing Clase of misconduct on a scale so vast that it threatens to unfairly taint any joint trial. The filing paints a picture of alleged manipulation stretching from 2023 through 2025, involving dozens of games, hundreds of pitches, and extensive communication with bettors.

Federal prosecutors had previously listed nine specific games in which Clase allegedly manipulated his pitches to benefit gamblers. Now, according to Georgalis, the government’s own evidence suggests something far larger. The filing states that Clase is accused of “26 months of alleged criminal conduct,” including suspect pitches across 48 games, dozens of communications with a bettor, cash transfers, and coordination of illegal wagers. If proven true, it would represent one of the most extensive on-field betting conspiracies in modern MLB history.
ESPN has reached out to attorneys for Clase and Ortiz, as well as the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York, which is prosecuting the case. Major League Baseball declined further comment, referring inquiries back to its earlier statement confirming cooperation with federal authorities. The league placed both pitchers on non-disciplinary leave in July as the gambling investigation intensified.
Ortiz’s legal team is now pushing hard for severance, arguing that his alleged role is fundamentally different. Prosecutors accuse Ortiz of rigging pitches in just two games in June 2025, while emphasizing that the indictment does not include evidence that Ortiz communicated directly with bettors. Georgalis warned that presenting a jury with months of alleged misconduct by Clase could lead to guilt by association. “Markedly different levels of culpability,” the filing argues, would deny Ortiz a fair trial if the cases remain linked.

The numbers alone are staggering. Clase appeared in 197 regular-season games between 2023 and July 2025, when MLB sidelined him amid the inquiry. If the allegations hold, that would mean suspicious conduct in roughly one quarter of his appearances. A separate court record reveals that a judge has already urged prosecutors to provide Clase’s defense team with detailed evidence regarding the pitches in question. According to that record, Clase has identified at least 250 pitches on which bets were placed, prompting the court to encourage broader discovery disclosure by the government.
At the center of the case are charges that carry severe consequences. Clase and Ortiz have both pleaded not guilty to wire fraud conspiracy, honest services wire fraud conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy, and conspiracy to influence sporting events by bribery. The most serious counts carry potential sentences of up to 20 years in prison. Prosecutors allege the two accepted thousands of dollars in bribes to assist two unnamed gamblers in the Dominican Republic, their native country, in winning at least $460,000 by betting on the speed and outcomes of specific pitches.
The allegations strike especially hard given Clase’s stature in the game. A three-time All-Star and two-time American League Reliever of the Year, Clase was widely regarded as one of baseball’s most dominant closers. He was in the fourth season of a five-year, $20 million contract at the time MLB placed him on leave. Ortiz, meanwhile, joined the Guardians in 2025 after three seasons with the Pittsburgh Pirates and appeared in 16 games before being sidelined.

Beyond the courtroom, the case has reignited uncomfortable conversations across baseball. Sports betting, once taboo, is now deeply intertwined with professional leagues through sponsorships and partnerships. This case, with its allegations of pitch-level manipulation, challenges assurances that safeguards are sufficient. If individual pitches—the most granular unit of the game—can be compromised, the implications for fan trust are profound.
The trial is currently scheduled for May 4, though Ortiz’s attorney has requested additional time. As that date approaches, more details are expected to emerge, potentially reshaping the narrative once again. For now, the scandal remains unresolved, but its gravity is unmistakable. What began as a limited indictment has evolved into a case that could redefine how MLB confronts gambling, accountability, and the fragile line between competition and corruption.