Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Video breach

-

Commission­er Rob Manfred said Major League Baseball is trying to remove from the internet the leaked video of former New York Mets manager Terry Collins (above, right) ranting at umpires. The profanity-laced video surfaced this week from a game between the Mets and Los Angeles Dodgers in May 2016 that Fox televised. Collins argued with umpire Tom Hallion (left) after pitcher Noah Syndergaar­d was ejected after throwing behind Chase Utley.

NEW YORK — Commission­er Rob Manfred said Major League Baseball is trying to remove from the internet the leaked video of former Mets manager Terry Collins ranting at umpires.

The profanity-laced video surfaced this week from a Dodgers-Mets game in May 2016 that Fox televised. Collins fumes after ace Noah Syndergaar­d is ejected in the third inning for throwing a fastball behind Chase Utley. In the 2015 playoffs, Utley broke the leg of Mets infielder Ruben Tejada with a late, hard slide.

Umpire crew chief Tom Hallion is heard explaining the ejection to Syndergaar­d, Neil Walker and other Mets, then he breaks away to head off Collins. For many fans, the loud exchange between Collins and Hallion illuminate­d what actually gets said during heated disputes.

“We made a commitment to the umpires that if they would wear microphone­s, certain types of interactio­ns that we all know go on the field would not be aired publicly,” Manfred said Thursday after the owners meetings ended.

“We promised them that. It’s in the collective bargaining agreement. We had no choice in a situation like that than to do everything possible to live up to our agreement. It is Labor Relations 101. To not do that is the kind of breach of trust that puts you in a bad spot over the long haul,” he said.

Manfred said baseball was pleased with the pace of play. Games this year were averaging 2 hours, 59 minutes, 49 seconds through Wednesday; last year, they averaged 3:05:11.

Mound visits by catchers, coaches, managers and other teammates for nonpitchin­g changes are down, too, from 7.41 last year to an average of 3.92 this season.

Manfred said the owners had a long discussion about the “sports betting landscape” after Delaware and New Jersey began legal betting on games.

As for the never-ending debate on the designated hitter and whether the National League would ever switch to the DH, Manfred said: “I think that is a continuing source of conversati­on among the ownership group and I think that the dialogue actually probably moved a little bit.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States