MLB: More blown calls by umpires in Game 4 of ALCS
Associated Press
ANAHEIM, Calif. � The umpires had another rough night in Game 4 of the AL championship series.
Two blown calls went against the Angels during a 10-1 loss to the New York Yankees. Neither cost Los Angeles a run, but it was the latest round of shaky umpiring this October � and the string of missed calls has been an embarrassment to Major League Baseball throughout the playoffs.
�I haven�t seen it as bad as it was tonight,� said Yankees Hall of Famer Reggie Jackson, now a senior adviser with the team.
In the fourth inning Tuesday, Dale Scott called New York�s Nick Swisher safe at second base after Swisher was clearly tagged by shortstop Erick Aybar before he could get back to the bag on a pickoff throw by Scott Kazmir.
In the fifth, Swisher hit a comebacker to Darren Oliver, who immediately threw to the plate and caught Jorge Posada in a rundown. Mike Napoli ran Posada back to the bag while Robinson Cano coasted into third, and the Angels� catcher ended up tagging both runners standing off the bag � first Cano, then Posada. But crew chief Tim McClelland ruled that only Posada was out.
�I thought Cano was on the base,� said McClelland, a longtime veteran and one of baseball�s most respected umpires.
He acknowledged the video replay showed that Cano was off the base when he was tagged.
�I did not see that, for whatever reason,� said McClelland, who spoke in the interview room after the game but did not take questions. �I�m just out there trying to do my job and do it the best I can.�
The Angels did get a break in the fourth when Swisher was called out for leaving third base too soon on Johnny Damon�s fly to center. Swisher was called out on an appeal, resulting in an inning-ending double play � though replays appeared to show Swisher did not leave early.
�In my heart, I thought he left too soon,� McClelland said. �But the replay showed that he didn�t.�
Jackson thinks McClelland deserves some slack.
�Tonight was not a good day for the umpires, but it will happen,� he said. �The third base umpire is recognized as one of the great umpires. No doubt. He umped when I played. So if one of your best umpires in baseball has a bad night, I do not hold it against him.�
There was another disputed call in Game 1 at Yankee Stadium, when first base ump Laz Diaz ruled Torii Hunter out on his sixth-inning bunt. Angels manager Mike Scioscia argued that first baseman Mark Teixeira�s foot came off the bag when he stretched for CC Sabathia�s throw.
�One umpire said something about a week or so ago in New York, an umpire said, `We do our best to be perfect, and it can�t be done.� And that is true,� Jackson said in the Yankees� clubhouse after the game. �It just seems like the advent of replay makes it more pronounced. They didn�t show the plays (over and over) as much as they do now. There�s more coverage and more scrutiny.�
In the AL division series between the Angels and Boston Red Sox, there were several missed calls � including two by CB Bucknor at first base in Game 1.
Late in Game 2 of the Twins-Yankees series, umpire Phil Cuzzi called Joe Mauer�s drive foul even though it clearly landed fair in the corner. Cuzzi was working the left-field line. His call denied Mauer a leadoff double for Minnesota.
In the Phillies-Rockies series, plate umpire Jerry Meals didn�t see that a ball hit by Philadelphia�s Chase Utley grazed him in the batter�s box. It should have been called foul, but Utley wound up with a crucial infield single.
After watching a replay, Meals acknowledged that he missed the call.
�The difference between now and when I played is that back then, the best umpires did the postseason,� Jackson said. �The best umpires should be there.�
Asked if instant replay should be used on all close calls except for balls and strikes, Jackson said: �It seems like it to me. That�s a commissioner issue, but I would be for it. The commissioner, for one thing, is a baseball fan, so I think that he�ll get it right.�