Umpire wrongly applies ABS challenge rule, forces Mets to burn challenge
Players signal ABS challenge by tapping their head. Brett Baty didn't do that.
MLB umpires are supposed to be the rulebook experts on the field. Which makes it awkward when one of them clearly gets something wrong. The New York Mets lost their second and final challenge of their game against the Detroit Tigers on Wednesday after a fateful interaction between third baseman Brett Baty and home plate umpire Junior Valentine.
With an 0-1 count and two outs in the sixth inning, Tigers starting pitcher Framber Valdez threw a low sinker for strike 2. Baty clearly didn’t like the call and appeared to say as much to Valentine, who then announced Baty was challenging the ball-strike call. There was just one problem: Baty did not challenge the call.
Baty did reach toward his helmet as if to signal a challenge, but his hand never reached his head. Valentine still decided that constituted a challenge, leading to protests from both Baty and Mets manager Carlos Mendoza. The Mets are out of ABS challenges tonight after home plate umpire Junior Valentine determined Brett Baty called for a review.
Baty never touched his helmet. pic. twitter.