Welcome back to Insider Weekly! I'm Matt Turner, editor-in-chief of business at Insider.

Sometimes something just doesn't feel right, even if you can't put your finger on why. For many baseball fans, that's been true for some time.

Every baseball is slightly different from the next. But in 2021 in particular, it felt as though the baseballs were especially unpredictable. Home runs that should have been weren't and vice versa.

This week, Bradford William Davis got to the bottom of that mystery. He reported that while Major League Baseball introduced a new ball with a lighter center that it said would travel slightly less far off the bat, as it had pledged to do in February, it also continued to use an older, heavier-center ball. The problem: It apparently didn't tell fans, clubs, or players. Read on for an interview with Davis and his editor, John Cook.

Also in this week's newsletter:

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Behind the scenes of our MLB investigation

Abbreviated digital thumbnail image of two baseballs on an unbalanced gold scale over a dark blue background
Mark Weiss/Getty; Krittiraj Adchasai/iStock; Taylor Tyson/Insider

Reporter Bradford William Davis and editor John Cook share the inside scoop on our investigation into MLB's use of two different balls last season.

What prompted you to look into this?

Bradford: It started with Dr. Meredith Wills, the astrophysicist who supplied her latest study on the ball to Insider. Her work has been so captivating and notable, because practically everyone watching the game knew something has been off about the baseballs for years, especially players. It doesn't hurt to be generally distrusting of organized sports— it gives me the impetus to thoroughly poke at something when I see it.

What was one of the most surprising findings from the investigation?

John: We had Dr. Wills' data; we knew she was unimpeachable; we knew it was true. But there is always going to be a lingering concern: What if it's just noise in the data? What if there is something we think we understand but don't? It's not every day that a furtive, opaque institution like MLB basically throws its hands up and says, "OK, you got us." But given Bradford's reporting and Dr. Wills' research, they didn't have many options.

What should readers take away from this report?

John: MLB has a lot of explaining to do. Do they know which balls went to which parks? Did they distribute them at random? If they told the players' union about the decision, as they claim, why didn't any players know about it? How did they think they would be able to make a decision like this without the players and fans finding out?

Read our full investigation here: Major League Baseball secretly used 2 different types of baseballs last season


Ray Dalio says the US is in trouble

2021 01 25T105118Z_1924936237_RC2YEL9EH2SH_RTRMADP_3_USA BIDEN DALIO.JPG
Ray Dalio is one of the most successful hedge fund bosses of all time.Thomas Peter/Reuters

Ray Dalio of Bridgewater Associates, known for successful investing on a global scale, has been studying the rise and fall of empires — and says the US is on the brink of an empire-ending catastrophe.

In an exclusive interview, he told us that investors should stay balanced, consider the effects of inflation, and hold little cash.

Here's why he's worried — and how he says you should invest your money.


Leaked video shows Better CEO explaining layoffs

Vishal Garg ceo better
Vishal Garg is the founder and CEO of Better.com.Better.com

On Wednesday, shortly after the online-mortgage startup Better laid off hundreds of people, CEO Vishal Garg addressed employees in a livestreamed town-hall meeting. A leaked recording of the meeting was shared with Insider.

In the video, Garg told remaining employees that the company lost $100 million last quarter. He said, "We acknowledge that we overhired and hired the wrong people, and in doing that, we failed."

More from the leaked video here.


Search every known flight made by Jeffrey Epstein's private jets

Jeffrey Epstein jet
Insider

Between 1995 and his arrest on sex-trafficking charges in 2019, Jeffrey Epstein flew prolifically aboard his fleet of private planes, often in the company of celebrities, statesmen, and girls.

We've compiled every known flight taken by the sex offender's jets — more than 2,500 in total — and published them in a searchable format for the first time. 

Check out the database here.


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Compiled with help from Jordan Erb.

Read the original article on Business Insider