National Post (National Edition)

Umpire under microscope, again

Controvers­ial arbiter overruled on three replays in Game 3

- Ronald Blum

NEW YORK• Angel Hernandez hit .250 in Game 3 of the AL Division Series. That’s a mediocre batting average for a player and awful replay average for an umpire.

Hernandez was overruled on three of four video reviews of his decisions at first base during Boston’s 16-1 rout of the New York Yankees on Monday night.

“There were several very close calls at first base tonight, and we are glad that instant replay allowed the umpiring crew to achieve the proper result on all of them,” Major League Baseball said in a statement.

The Red Sox, Yankees and fans around the country will see plenty of Hernandez on Tuesday night, when he’s scheduled to work the plate in Game 4.

The 57-year-old Hernandez was born in Havana, joined the major league staff in 1993 and worked the World Series in 2002 and 2005. He sued MLB in U.S. District Court in Cincinnati in July 2017, alleging race discrimina­tion and citing his lack of World Series assignment­s in the past decade and baseball not promoting him to crew chief. The suit alleges MLB chief baseball officer Joe Torre “has a history of animosity toward Hernandez stemming from Torre’s time as manager of the New York Yankees.”

MLB moved to dismiss the case, but U.S. District Judge Michael Barrett transferre­d it to federal court in Manhattan in Sept. 30 without ruling on the motion to dismiss.

“Angel was horrible,” Hall of Famer Pedro Martinez said on TBS’ post-game show. “Major League Baseball needs to do something about Angel. It doesn’t matter how many times he sues Major League Baseball. He’s as bad as there is. That’s the main reason we’re sitting here so late.”

Hernandez’s troubles started in the second inning, when Didi Gregorius bunted and the umpire ruled Gregorius beat the throw from pitcher Nathan Eovaldi. The call was overturned, giving New York a runner on second with one out.

When Gleyber Torres hit a three-hopper off the mound in the third with the Yankees trailing 3-0, shortstop Xander Bogaerts gloved the ball, continued onto the second-base side of the dirt and threw to first, when Hernandez signalled safe. That, too, was overturned by the replay room umpires, which include Marvin Hudson, Brian Knight, David Rackley and Bill Welke during the Division Series.

New York trailed 10-0 in the fourth when Luke Voit hit a comebacker off the bare hand of Eovaldi, and Hernandez signalled Voit beat the throw from second baseman Brock Holt for an infield hit. That was upheld by replay room umpires.

Stanton then singled to put runners at the corners, and Gregorius grounded to Holt. The second baseman made a backhand flip to Bogaerts covering second for a forceout, and Bogaerts threw to first, where Hernandez signalled out for a double-play. That led to Hernandez’s third reversal.

Expanded video review in the major leagues began in 2014.

 ?? RICK SCUTERI / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Angel Hernandez, a Cuban-born umpire who worked his first major-league game in 1993, sued MLB in U.S. District Court last year, alleging race discrimina­tion.
RICK SCUTERI / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Angel Hernandez, a Cuban-born umpire who worked his first major-league game in 1993, sued MLB in U.S. District Court last year, alleging race discrimina­tion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada