Details of the letter about the Yankees’ involvement in sign stealing will be released.

Astros fans are waiting for the release of a letter containing information about the sign-stealing investigation by the Yankees.

The organization lost its appeal to keep theYankees Letter sealed, according to The Athletic.

Randy Levine said what the outcome was.

We respect the decision of the Court of Appeals. I believe that this will lead to a lot of bad results down the road.

The letter was written by DraftKings users who claimed that the cheating scandals involving the Red Sox, Astros, and Yankees negatively affected their daily fantasy outcomes. The Yankees Letter is my favorite part of the story because of the fact that unlucky people irate over the sports betting version of KENO taking their money. The name is my least favorite part. We can do better than the Yankees Letter.

The contents of the message are unknown, but the public will be able to see how MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred interpreted the findings of the investigation into the Bronx Bombers. Houston fans think that their team is the most egregious violator of sign stealing, and have fantasized about the release of the letter as much as any horny teenager has fantasized about sex.

Who knows how bad the correspondence will be. It could end up as inconsequential as The Washington Post's Yankees Letter-esque book titled "TheMueller Report", but the actual report, with the people getting mad but not getting the deserved punishment they desire. Brian Cashman is hoping it will blow over after he blamed the team's World Series failure on the one year Houston cheated.

It is shocking that the GM has lasted this long. He has survived multiple postseason collapses and Steinbrenners, and is currently overseeing the team's third-longest run without a title. He is unkillable for some inexplicable reason.

Hal wrote a note to Steinbrenner asking for forgiveness because he had to pay his players. windling funds would explain a lot. I have no idea, but I like to speculate.

The person who will take the biggest hit is Manfred. If he showed preferential treatment to the league's most popular franchise and downplayed the extent of its cheating scandal, it will have fans, teams, and owners angry. I was put at ease by the cries of angry owners, but it didn't help Manfred.

More bad PR for the commish would be worrisome after the MLB handled the lockout by staring into space and waiting for the players to cave. The caveat is that he might be a nihilist who doesn't care about anything. Fire him. See if he blinks or bleeds.

If you think this letter is going to exonerate your team of its transgressions, or shut up Yankees fans, you are delusional. Nothing will top banging on a trash can if New York was using the PA system to tip pitches. Have you ever met Yankees fans? If you make a good point, they go straight to 27 rings.

The Yankee brass tried to get the Second Circuit Court of Appeals to rehear the case because of the juicy contents of the letter.

I don't know what an en banc rehearing is, or what the Yankees Letter is, but I know my interest is.

The truth will set you free and bolster your baseball arguments.