The Maui News

Yankee’s Boone ejected 5 pitches into game vs. A’s

- AP Baseball Writer By RONALD BLUM

NEW YORK (AP) — Aaron Boone didn’t tie the record for fastest ejection. The New York Yankees manager did think it was among the most unjust dismissals.

Boone was thrown out of Monday’s 2-0 loss to Oakland five pitches in by Hunter Wendelsted­t over a remark the Yankees maintained was yelled by a fan behind the dugout, while the plate umpire said it was something shouted from the far end of New York’s bench.

“It’s embarrassi­ng,” Boone said. “I couldn’t believe it.”

Esteury Ruiz was hit on the back foot by Carlos Rodón’s

slider leading off the game.

Standing on the dugout steps, Boone raised his hands, questionin­g whether Ruiz swung at the pitch. First base umpire John Tumpane determined Ruiz did not swing and should go to first base.

After a called strike to Tyler Nevin, Wendelsted­t removed his mask, took a few steps toward the Yankees’ dugout and could be heard by a YES Network microphone yelling at Boone: “Hey, guess what? You’re not yelling at me. I did what I’m supposed to do and checked! I’m looking for him to get hit by the pitch! You got anything else to say, you’re gone! OK?”

Wendelsted­t pointed at Boone as he finished. Boone, leaning on the dugout rail with his left arm, held up his left hand as if to signal OK, then gave the umpire a thumbs-up.

As the umpire put his mask back on and walked behind catcher Shea Langeliers, a fan behind the dugout in a blue shirt appeared to yell at Wendelsted­t. The umpire pulled off his mask and demonstrat­ively waved his right arm in an arc, thumb extended, screaming: “Aaron, you’re done! I don’t care who said it. You’re gone!”

Boone ran onto the field and pointed to the fan.

“It was above our dugout!” Boone exclaimed. “I didn’t say anything! I did not say anything!”

Wendelsted­t responded: “I don’t care who said it, you’re gone!”

Boone went on to declare several times, “I did not say a word,” along with several profanitie­s. Crew chief Marvin Hudson joined them in an attempt to calm Boone.

“You warned me, and I shut up,” Boone told Wendelsted­t.

“You’re probably right, Aaron,” the umpire replied.

“I’m not probably right, I’m f---in right,” Boone responded.

After the game, Wendelsted­t said that as manager of the Yankees, Boone is “responsibl­e for everything that happens in that dugout.”

“In my opinion, the cheap shot came towards the far end, so instead of me being aggressive and walking down to the far end and trying to figure out who might have said it or who — I don’t want to eject a ballplayer; we need to keep them in the game. That’s what the fans pay to see. Aaron Boone runs the Yankees, he got ejected.”

New York first baseman Anthony Rizzo looked at the ejection this way: “I feel like his ears are wide open, so anything coming from that direction, you’re on a very short fuse.”

It wasn’t the earliest ejection.

Baltimore manager Earl Weaver was ejected by Ron Luciano while exchanging lineup cards before the second game of a doublehead­er against Texas on Aug. 15, 1975, still upset over a call that led to his getting tossed in the fourth inning of the opener.

Los Angeles Angels pitcher John Lackey was ejected by plate umpire Bob Davidson on May 15, 2009, after his first pitch of the season sailed behind Ian Kinsler and the next hit the Rangers’ leadoff hitter in the ribs.

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