Ump makes tough call during high-leverage at bat, a breakdown

May 21, 2023 1.4M views 0:54

What Happened

New York Mets closer Edwin Díaz steps onto the mound in the bottom of the eighth inning, with the Mets clinging to a one-run lead over their crosstown rival New York Yankees. The tying run is in scoring position with two outs, setting the stage for a high-leverage at-bat. Díaz starts off Gleyber Torres with a sinker for a called strike. The next pitch is a slider that Torres fouls off. Díaz seems to have a good feel for his two primary pitches so far in the at-bat. Torres then barely avoids getting hit in the midsection by another slider from Díaz, prompting the Mets closer to jokingly give a double thumbs-up. The next pitch is a sinker that Torres fouls back into the strike zone. Díaz comes back with another sinker, but this one misses the zone wide. The count is now full, 3-2, as the tension builds in the stadium. Díaz rears back and delivers another sinker, this one right in the heart of the strike zone. Umpire Chad Whitson calls it a strike, ending the at-bat and the inning. However, Díaz immediately protests the call, gesturing to Whitson that the pitch was outside the zone. "That wasn't in the zone, what the hell?" Díaz says to the umpire, clearly disagreeing with the crucial strike three call. The high-leverage moment has passed, with the Mets holding onto their slim one-run lead heading to the ninth inning. This intense, pressure-packed at-bat encapsulates the rivalry and drama of this Subway Series matchup between the Mets and Yankees. With the game on the line, Díaz and Torres engaged in a back-and-forth battle, only for the umpire's judgment call to ultimately determine the outcome. It's a reminder that even the smallest moments can loom large in these heated crosstown clashes.

Full Transcript

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tying run on second two outs in the

eighth first pitch Sinker for strike the

next pitch slider for a strike now Diaz

think okay those are the two pitches huh

yeah one goes this way one goes that way