Orioles - 103 020 101 - 8 15 0 Red Sox - 000 120 100 - 4 11 0Nick Markakis lined John Lackey's first pitch of the game down the left field line. The ball landed foul, kicking up only dirt to the left of the chalk line.
Third base umpire Will Little signaled a fair ball and Markakis pulled in at second with a double.
Boston manager John Farrell challenged the call. As two umpires donned headsets to listen as the play was reviewed, Fenway Park's scoreboard showed replays of the ball landing foul. So now everyone in the park knew the ball was not a double. After a delay of roughly three minutes, the word came from New York that Little's initial call was upheld. It was a double.
It's bad enough that an umpire, properly aligned over the foul line (as I assume Little was), cannot make the correct call on a ball landing only several yards away, and directly in front of him. But to have clear, convincing replays showing the ball landing in foul territory - no white chalk dust was kicked up by the baseball - and STILL have the wrong call stand is maddening.
On a call so obvious that still gets called wrong, one has to wonder: why? Are the officials reviewing the plays in New York legally blind? Are they flipping a coin to determine their decisions? Perhaps they are continuing to punish Farrell, who expressed his distinct lack of faith in the replay system after another blown call (in the Yankees series) was upheld? If the answers to those questions are "no", then why are clear calls being blown? Will we hear after this game - as we did after that Yankees game - that MLB did not have access to all of the replays shown on television - a patently absurd excuse? With each blown call, MLB umpires are revealing themselves as nothing but incompetent arbiters, not worthy of holding jobs in the major leagues.
Naturally, Markakis ended up scoring in the inning, on Adam Jones's single. In the third, Baltimore put the game out of reach, scoring three times, and taking a 4-0 lead. Markakis knocked in one run with a "real" double to right field and Nelson Cruz singled two more runners home.
Lackey (5.1-10-6-4-6, 100) allowed six runs for the second consecutive start.
It was another frustrating night for the Red Sox bats. They loaded the bases in the second with one out, and could not score. And when it looked like they might come back, they stranded two runners in each of the fourth and fifth innings.
Sizemore, LFRyan Roberts has been designated for assignment; Brock Holt has been called up from Pawtucket.
Nava, RF
Pedroia, 2B
Napoli, DH
Carp, 1B
Bogaerts, SS
Pierzynski, C
Bradley, CF
Holt, 3B
Boston is home for the next seven games, four against Baltimore and three against the Yankees.
The Jays had a rough eighth inning last night, blowing a 5-3 lead by giving up six runs on eight walks, three wild pitches and one hit.
ReplyDeleteWalk, walk, sac bunt, walk, wild pitch (first run scores), walk and wild pitch (second run scores), walk and wild pitch (third run scores), walk, walk, single (fourth and fifth runs score), walk, strike out, ground out!
The Jays had a rough eighth inning last night, blowing a 5-3 lead by giving up six runs on eight walks, three wild pitches and one hit.
ReplyDeleteWalk, walk, sac bunt, walk, wild pitch (first run scores), walk and wild pitch (second run scores), walk and wild pitch (third run scores), walk, walk, single (fourth and fifth runs score), walk, strike out, ground out!
I'm trying to imagine how it felt being the pitcher at about the walk right after the second walk and wild pitch.
ReplyDeleteI mean...theoretically...a half-inning can go on forever, right?.
There have been a series of supremely frustrating and annoying games this season. This was just another in a string.
ReplyDeleteWith the hitting as it is, I suggest no more scheduled days off for Papi. Why does a DH need a day off anyway?
ReplyDeleteProbably because his Achilles is about to explode and he's 38.
ReplyDeleteWhy does a DH need a day off anyway?
ReplyDeleteFor the same reason everyone else needs a day off. Surely you're not implying that being a DH is the same thing as not working at all?
I know it's early, but I can't understand how the replay system is this bad. Maybe it was meant to fail. I'm sure on-field umpires have no interest in replay showing how often they get big calls wrong.
ReplyDeleteA small attempt at humor. I guess I should have put a smiley face beside it. With the potent offense of last year, his absence was less noticeable.
ReplyDeleteOops, sorry! At least this time I wasn't the only sarcasm-challenged commenter. :)
ReplyDelete