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September 30, 2025

ALWC 1: Red Sox 3, Yankees 1

Red Sox - 000 000 201 - 3  8  0
Yankees - 010 000 000 - 1 7 0
Nick Sogard sprinted from first to second base in the top of the seventh inning as Aaron Judge ho-hummed the ball back to the infield. That explosive hustle (which Sogard had shown back in the third when he tagged and took second on a fly to center) put Boston runners at second and third, with one out. Pinch-hitter Masataka Yoshida singled to center on the first pitch he saw. Two runs scored and the Yankees' 1-0 lead was gone.

That rally had begun (in part) because MFY manager Aaron Boone took lefty Max Fried (6.1-4-0-3-6, 102) out of the game after he retired the first batter of the inning. (Good move, Boone-y!) Luke Weaver got ahead of Ceddanne Rafaela 0-2, but Rafaela made him work after that, fouling off five pitches and taking a couple of very close balls (that many shittier umpires would have mistakenly called strikes), and earning an 11-pitch walk. Sogard then doubled to right-center. ESPN's Karl Ravech noted that the hit came on a changeup, which he said "had been his pitch all night", apparently thinking that Fried was still in the game. (Ravech had more than a few cringe-inducing moments behind the mic. More later.)

Sogard was clocked at 7.9 seconds from second to home, which ESPN told us was the fastest second-to-home sprint of his career!. Okay, so Sogard's career consists of only 61 games. I do not know how many of the 26 runs he has scored were second-to-home and how many of those required him to sprint the entire way, but this was the perfect time for him to be the speediest he can be.

[By the way, I'll pay $50 to hear the whole fuckin story of that woman's evening.]

Boone has been roasted for his poor and questionable decisions in recent postseasons. He won't escape angry MFY fans this year, either, because he chose not to give Fried a third trip through the lineup. Fried had allowed five baserunners in the previous three innings (single, double, three walks), but when he was pulled (after 25 batters), Boston's 8-9 batters were next. Boone couldn't have known Weaver would immediately shit the bed (lol), but if Fried had been allowed to finish the seventh, who knows? [This post might have started off something like this: "Only one game into the 2025 postseason and the Red Sox's backs are already against the wall."] (P.S.: Fried had a 1.55 ERA over his last seven regular season starts, five of which were seven innings in length. Just sayin'.)

Boston's acquisition of Aroldis Chapman last winter (after doing some due diligence) annoyed me. It's an odd feeling hoping players you dislike do well or having to rely on relievers whose performance in past postseasons is (at best) undeniably shaky (hey, Kenley). I should fuckin love the guy for how he ruined the Yankees' postseason chances in 2019 (!!) and 2020, but that's not how it works. Well, it turns out Chapman is still fuckin with the MFY!

Garrett Crochet (7.2-4-1-0-11, 116) gave the Red Sox the masterful performance necessary in Game 1 of a best-of-three series. He stumbled a bit out of the gate, putting runners on first and second after only four pitches. But a strikeout of Cody Bellinger and a Giancarlo Stanton GIDP took care of that. Anthony Volpe lined a hone run to right-center in the second to give New York a 1-0 lead. 

After that, Crochet was nearly perfect. He retired the next 17 batters, including striking out the side in the fifth and zipping through the seventh on five pitches. Manager Alex Cora had Garrett Whitlock and Chapman warming up in the pen in the seventh inning, but he didn't give Crochet the hook until there were two outs in the eighth. Crochet needed eight pitches to retire his final batter, Austin Wells, on a full-count fastball at 100 mph, his fastest pitch of the game.

Cora called on Chapman with the potential tying run on first (Volpe singled). Right away, Chapman starting behaving like the Chapman I feared I'd see. He made two throws to first and had a 2-2 count on Caballlero -- and then he threw over to first again. Which is now against the fuckin rules -- and so Volpe skipped over to second on what GDGD called a "disengagement violation" (also scored as a balk).

Caballero then lined a shot to right center -- it was hard to tell if it would fall in for a hit. Rafaela moved over and braced for a two-handed catch, but Wilyer Abreu came sprinting over from right and caught the ball mere inches from Rafaela's glove, while also coming alarmingly close to colliding with him. 

That inning-ending out gave Red Sox fans a sudden heart attack. They would experience a slow motion heart attack in the following inning. Thankfully, Boston added an insurance run. With two outs, Trevor Story singled to left, stole second and scored on Alex Bregman's one-hop double to left. Chapman had a two-run lead and needed only three outs. That shouldn't be too difficult, right?

The Yankees had the top of the order up in the bottom of the ninth. Every customer in the park was also standing. And this unfolded:
Paul Goldschmidt: ball, foul, single (sliced to right)
Judge: single (hard grounder up the middle)
Bellinger: single (dropped into left-center)
Bases loaded. Three baserunners on three consecutive pitches. No outs. Boston still led 3-1, but Chapman was now drenched in (flop?) sweat and there were tumbleweeds blowing through the bullpen. Whitlock was nowhere to be seen. Stanton was up. It looks like Chapman had a good season -- he pitched 11 near-perfect innings in August, retiring 33 of 34 batters (12 games, 11-0-0-1-14) -- and he decided to show me what he could do.

Stanton fouled a pitch off (100 mph), chased a fastball up (100), fouled off another (101). Chapman then took a little off, getting Stanton to fan on a splitter at 92. Chapman got ahead of Jazz Chisholm: foul ball (100), called strike (101). [Laura and I were watching the game, side by side on the couch. Me: "'Gotta make it interesting.'" L: "I was just about to say that!!" She couldn't remember the exact details, so I rattled them off. "Theo said that Clark's at-bat was for him the most terrifying moment of that entire series." (At the moment I cannot remember who interviewed Foulke for DLUWT. Was it me? What did he say about those moments? I'll have to check.)]

Chisholm lifted a fly ball to right. Ordinary distance, maybe a bit shallow. Abrue has a good arm -- Goldschmidt stayed where he was. Two outs. And Chapman had throw no balls to those two batters: eight pitches, all strikes. 

Trent Grisham was 0-for-3 with three strikeouts against Crochet. Chapman missed a bit high at 101 for a ball. A foul ball and other 101 heater at the top of the zone. But it, too, was called a ball by umpire Junior Valentine. [Never heard of him, but he debuted in 2020 and has worked full-time since 2023. His first name might really be Junior. He lives in Tennessee. (Does he have a farm?)] Chapman fired a slider (moseying along at an relatively arthritic 87) and Grisham took it for strike two. Then it was back to the fuckin gas, up and in, Grisham had no chance. Strike three. Red Sox win 3-1.

That was a classic (and ultimately extremely satisfying) example of the ol' Allow-Yankee-Fans-To-Believe-Their-Team-Is-Rallying-To-Win-In-The-Ninth-Inning-And-Get-Them-Anticipating-The-Inevitable-Victory-As-A-Sure-Fuckin-Thing-Because-They-Are-The-YANKEES-After-All-But-Then-Slamming-The-Door-In-Their-Faces-Making-Them-Come-Sooooooooooo-Close-To-Winning-But-Handing-Them-A-Loss-That-Feels-Ten-Times-Worse-Than-A-Regular-Loss-With-No-Failed-Rally (hereinafter, "AYFTBTTIRTWITNIAGTATIVAASFTBTATYAABTSTDITFMTCSCTWBHTALTFTTWTARLWNFR").

The first six innings were frustrating as hell. Bregman had a two-out single in the first and Sogard was left at second in the second. Carlos Narváez (who played six games with the Yankees in 2024) walked with two down in the third and raced to third when Nate Eaton flaired a double down the right field line. Jarren Duran got ahead 3-0 but Fried got two called strikes, the first in the lower half of the zone, the second in the upper half of the zone, and then he went slightly above the zone and Duran chased it for strike three.

Boston got two runners on in the fifth, as well, also after two outs. Rob Refsnyder walked and Story singled, but Bregman grounded to third. Narváez walked with one out in the sixth, before Eaton grounded into a 4U-3 double play.

Isn't Karl Ravech a Red Sox fan? In the bottom of the sixth, Caballero hit a 2-0 pitch to straight-away center. Ravech's voice rose in pitch and volume as if the ball was going to sail well over the outfielder's head and over the fence. But Rafaela caught it, with minimal effort, right where the outfield grass becomes the warning track. And then -- only three pitches later -- he truped himself again! Goldschmidt lined a ball to left. Duran moved to his right and close to the track and reached up and snared the ball, which was in no danger of landing among the equally-fooled rabble beyond the field of play. Judge stepped in and I feared Ravech might hurt his vocal chords if Judge got one in the air anywhere. But he chased a cutter up and away for a strikeout. 

During Rafaela's 11-pitch plate appearance in the seventh, Ravech made an offhand comment about how the postseason was "where Yankees become legends". David Cone and Edwardo Perez were the other two guys in the booth. Both of them were not needed, as Ravech was also providing "color". Early in the game, Perez referred to Stanton as "G" and pointed out that when Judge is at bat, he's already in "scoring position". [Actually, every single major league batter than has ever played the game has been in scoring position when he steps into the batter's box. Every single one. Even the guys who are not as eye-poppingly as tall as Judge. Man, he's so fuckin tall. The Yankees have to ship a special bed for him on road trips. And he can't find pants that fit, anything he wears looks like shorts. He's always arguing at fancy restaurants: "No, I am wearing pants, but because I make Paul Bunyan look like Danny DeVito, they just look like shorts."

In the fourth, Cone said that with a 3-2 count on Duran, Fried "needs to get the pitch in the strike zone". And then he repeated it, in case (I guess) some of the viewers missed that key nugget of inside knowledge from a fellow moundsman.



To All Fascists: Fuck off and fuck you!


Welcome to Stade Fasciste, the battleground of the Red Sox-Yankees best-of-three AL Wild Card series, beginning this evening.

The Red Sox went 9-4 against the Yankees this season. Fun Fact: The last time the Red Sox lost a postseason series to the MFY, Boston pitchers Garrett Crochet and Brayan Bello were too young for kindergarden -- they were both four years old.

Game 1 starters Crochet and Max Fried travelled similar paths in 2025. Boston traded for Crochet the day after the Yankees signed Fried to a sizeable 8/218 contract. Crochet led MLB with 255 strikeouts . He also topped the AL with 205.1 innings; Fried was tied for second with 195.1. They each made 32 starts this season and they finished 3-4 in AL ERA (Crochet 2.59, Fried 2.86). They also had similar records: (Crochet 18-5, Fried 19-5).

Crochet started four games against the Yankees this year. The Red Sox won them all.

Bello will start Game 2 on Wednesday. Lucas Giolito, the probable starter for Game 3, will not be available because of "elbow issues". Connolly Early is a likely replacement

The three other Wild Card series:

Tigers at Guardians
Padres at Cubs
Reds at Dodgers

Everything Trump touches dies. Let's hope that continues.

September 23, 2025

In 2026, Our Robot Ump Overlords Arrive! Meekly Peek Their Heads Through The Doorway

MLB's Competition Committee has approved the limited use of an automated ball-strike challenge system for the 2026 season by a vote of 7-4. MLB owners, in control of a six-seat majority on the 11-member committee, all voted in favour of robot umps.

So – at long last – has MLB finally decided to join the 21st century (with 1/4 of it in the rear view mirror), acquire some long-overdue common sense, and agreed that baseball games should be decided by baseball players? . . . Not quite.

The new ball-strike system will allow each team only two challenges per game. Only batters, pitchers and catchers will be allowed to make a challenge (by tapping their head). If a challenge is successful, that team will retain its challenge. And a team will lose a challenge if it questions a call and the call is upheld.

Commissioner Ruining-Baseball-Every-Single-Day stated: "I commend the Joint Competition Committee for striking the right balance of preserving the integral role of the umpire in the game with the ability to correct a missed call in a high-leverage situation, all while preserving the pace and rhythm of the game."

Manfred will sleep soundly next season knowing the human element will still hover malevolently over the game, ever ready to inject itself into a game and fuck up the result, angering and frustrating millions of fans, every time. Umpires will still change the outcome of dozens of games (and act as smug as shit while doing it, of course) by blowing calls on pitches that are either not challenged or cannot be challenged (if a team has used up its opportunities). What good is finally adopting a sensible system for making correct calls but deciding to use it on an severely limited basis?

Does Manfred understand that there doesn't need to be a "high-leverage situation" for a missed call to change the outcome of a game? Maybe? Who knows? A blown call on a 1-0 or 0-1 pitch has a strong chance of changing the outcome of a plate appearance.

2025 MLB Stats (through Monday September 22):

First Pitch
After 1-0: .256/.376/.432
After 0-1: .217/.263/.344
1-0 Pitch
Ball 2-0: .267/.500/.467
Strike 1-1: .223/.302/.363
0-1 Pitch
Ball 1-1: .223/.302/.363
Strike 0-2: .166/.199/.256
2-1 Pitch
Ball 3-1: .256/.592/.454
Strike 2-2: .179/.286/.291
Teams should be allowed two challenges per batter – though, as we've all seen too many times to count, that might not even be enough.

The Worst Calls of 2025 (So Far)

Jeff Passan, ESPN:

The ABS system uses similar technology to the line-calling system in tennis, with 12 cameras in each ballpark tracking the ball with a margin of error around one-sixth of an inch. The ABS zone will be a two-dimensional plane in the middle of the plate that spans its full width (17 inches). The zone's top will be 53.5% of a player's height and the bottom 27%.

Teams that run out of challenges over the first nine innings will be granted an extra challenge in the 10th inning, while those that still have unused challenges will simply carry them into extras. If a team runs out of challenges in the 10th, it will automatically receive another in the 11th – a rule that extends for any extra inning.

During the league's spring training test this season, teams combined to average around four challenges per game and succeeded 52.2% of the time, according to the league. Catchers, whose value in framing pitches outside the zone to look like strikes could take a hit due to the new rule, were the most successful at a 56% overturn rate, while hitters were correct 50% of the time and pitchers 41%. . . .

Big league umpires call roughly 94% of pitches correctly, according to UmpScorecards.

That sounds nice, but what percentage of close pitches are called correctly? And how bad are the worst umps in that department? Pitches way outside, down the middle, and in the dirt, etc., make up a large percentage of that 94%. That's not what I care about.

The human eye is simply not sophisticated enough to determine (with the degree of accuracy necessary to properly umpire a major league baseball game) whether a pitch thrown at 85-105 mph is a strike or a ball. The technology exists to make those calls accurately – today's vote shows that MLB knows this is true – so MLB should simply stop having umpires attempt to do what evolution has not allowed human eyes to do.

This decision, while certainly a step in the right direction, is too small of a step. It ensaures that human umpires will continue to miss hundreds, if not thousands, of pitches in 2026, which will inevitably change the outcome of numerous games.

Poking around the internet for this post, I discovered some news I had missed. In February 2024, Manfred stated that he would step down as commissioner when his third term ends in January 2029! . . .  I'd be tempted to give baseball another chance if the next commissioner gets rid of the extra-inning runner. Maybe the robots will be working full-time by that time.

September 11, 2025

Albuquerque Isotopes (AAA-Rockies) Score In All Nine Innings In 21-10 PCL Rout

Isotopes   - 731 111 142 - 21 27  1
Chihuahuas - 000 007 102 - 10 17 2

The Albuquerque Isotopes scored in all nine innings on Wednesday, routing the El Paso Chihuahuas 21-10, in a Pacific Coast League game.

Brendan Samson (mlb.com) wrote: "In addition to hanging crooked numbers in all nine frames, the Isotopes also became the 21st full-season MiLB team to score 20 runs in a game this year."

Is 1 considered a "crooked" number? . . . I have not taken a survey, but I don't think so.

Albuquerque had only two zeroes in the traditional box score combo of AB-R-H-RBI. Amazingly, El Paso had only two, as well. (Brooks singled, at least.)


On Wednesday, September 9, 2009, Laura and I were at a PCL playoff game in Albuquerque. I caught a foul ball and we saw a somewhat confusing triple play. Two days ago was the — holy fuckballs — the 16th anniversary of that evening. How is that even possible?

(Alternative Outlook: That night was so long ago, I had seen the Red Sox win only two World Series Championships. ONLY TWO!)


More PCL Linescore Fun: A little over a month ago, on August 7, 2025, the Salt Lake Bees scored in all eight innings, edging past the visiting Las Vegas Aviators 15-12.
Aviators - 021 351 000 - 12 13  0
Bees - 211 142 22x - 15 16 1
Teams that score in every inning usually do not have to come from six runs down!