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Showing posts with labelAlex Tosi.Show all posts
Showing posts with labelAlex Tosi.Show all posts

Thursday, August 29, 2024

MLB Ejection 161 - Alex Tosi (4; Alex Bregman)

HP Umpire Alex Tosi ejected Astros 3B Alex Bregman (strike three call; QOCY) in the bottom of the 4th inning of the #Royals-#Astros game. With one out and none on, Astros batter Bregman took a 0-2 sinker from Royals pitcher Brady Singer for a called third strike. Replays indicate the pitch was located over the outer edge of home plate and belt high (px 0.83, pz 2.98), the call was correct.* At the time of the ejection, the game was tied, 0-0. The Astros ultimately won the contest, 6-3.

This is Alex Tosi (66)'s 4th ejection of 2024.
*UEFL Rule 6-2-b-1 (Kulpa Rule): |0| < STRIKE < |.748| < BORDERLINE < |.914| < BALL.
This pitch was located 1.00 horizontal inches from being deemed incorrect.

This is the 161st ejection report of the 2024 MLB regular season.
This is the 55th player ejection of 2024. Ejection Tally: 80 Managers, 26 Coaches, 55 Players.
This is Houston's 8th ejection of 2024, T-1st in the AL West (HOU, OAK8; SEA 7; LAA, TEX 6).
This is Alex Bregman's first career MLB ejection.
This is Alex Tosi's 4th ejection of 2024, 1st sinceMay 23 (Joey Bart; QOC = U [Check Swing]).

Thursday, May 23, 2024

MLB Ejection 055 - Alex Tosi (3; Joey Bart)

1B Umpire Alex Tosi ejected Pirates catcher Joey Bart (check swing strike one call) in the bottom of the 8th inning of the #Giants-#Pirates game. With two out and none on, Bart attempted to check his swing on a 2-0 slider from Giants pitcher Randy Rodríguez, ruled a ball by HP Umpire Tom Hanahan and called a swinging strike on appeal by 1B Umpire Tosi. After subsequently grounding out on the next pitch, Bart complained to Tosi about the check swing strike call while running past him near first base. At the time of the ejection, the Giants were leading, 7-6. The Giants ultimately won the contest, 7-6.

This is Alex Tosi (66)'s 3rd ejection of 2024.

This is the 55th ejection report of the 2024 MLB regular season.
This is the 22nd player ejection of 2024. Prior to ejection, Bart was 2-4 (HR, 4 RBI) in the contest.
Ejection Tally: 24 Managers, 9 Coaches, 22 Players.
This is Pittsburgh's 4th ejection of 2024, T-1st in the NL Central (MIL,PIT, STL 4; CHC, CIN 1).
This is Alex Tosi's 3rd ejection of 2024, 1st sinceMay 7 (Brandon Hyde; QOC = Y [Balls/Strikes]).

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

MLB Ejections 041-2 - Alex Tosi (1-2; BAL x2)

HP Umpire Alex Tosi ejected Orioles DH Ryan O'Hearn and manager Brandon Hyde (strike three call; QOCY) in the top of the 9th inning of the #Orioles-#Nationals game. With one out and none on, O'Hearn took a 1-2 fastball from Nationals pitcher Kyle Finnegan for a called third strike. Replays indicate the pitch was located over the outer edge of home plate and thigh-high (px 0.87, pz 2.27), the call was correct.* At the time of the ejection, the Nationals were leading, 3-0. The Nationals ultimately won the contest, 3-0.

These are Alex Tosi (66)'s 1st and 2nd ejections of 2024.
*UEFL Rule 6-2-b-1 (Kulpa Rule): |0| < STRIKE < |.748| < BORDERLINE < |.914| < BALL.
This pitch was located 0.53 horizontal inches from being deemed incorrect.

These are the 41st and 42nd ejection report of the 2024 MLB regular season.
This is the 17th player ejection of 2024. Prior to ejection, O'Hearn was 0-4 (2 SO) in the contest.
This is the 19th manager ejection of 2024. Ejection Tally: 19 Managers, 6 Coaches, 17 Players.
This is Baltimore's 1/2nd ejection of 2024, 3rd in the AL East (NYY, TOR 4;BAL 2; BOS, TB 1).
This is Ryan O'Hearn's first career MLB ejection.
This is Brandon Hyde's 1st ejection sinceAugust 8, 2023 (Edwin Moscoso; QOC = Y [Out/Safe]).
This is Alex Tosi's 1st ejection sinceSept 15, 2023 (Bryce Harper; QOC = N [Balls/Strikes]).

Monday, May 6, 2024

Calls of the Month - April 2024

CloseCallSports
' Top 5 Calls of the Month for April 2024 feature umpires whose concentration and keen eye allowed them to accurately assess close plays across Major League Baseball.

5) Alex Tosi's check swing hit-by-pitch in Cincinnati is confirmed via Replay Review.

4) Brian Walsh's out of play ruling on an overthrown ball is confirmed in Cincinnati.

3) CB Bucknor's out call on a force play at second base in Detroit is confirmed.

2) Angel Hernandez's HBP call in Los Angeles is confirmed by the slightest of margins.

1) Jonathan Parra's out call on a stolen base attempt in DC is confirmed by a tag on the heel.

Video as follows:

Saturday, April 6, 2024

MLB Ejection 005 - Brennan Miller (1; David Popkins)

HP Umpire Brennan Miller ejected Twins hitting coach David Popkins (strike two and three calls to Matt Wallner; QOCN) in the bottom of the 4th inning of the #Guardians-#Twins game. With two out and none on, Twins batter Matt Wallner took a 3-1 slider and 3-2 sinker from Guardians pitcher Nick Sandlin for called second and third strikes. Replays indicate the 3-1 pitch was located over the inner edge of home plate and below the hollow of the knee (px 0.71, pz 1.53 [sz_bot 1.87 / RAD 1.75 / MOE 1.67]) while 3-2 was located over the inner edge of home plate and at the hollow of the knee (px 0.80, pz 1.68 [sz_bot 1.87, RAD 1.75 / MOE 1.67]), the call was incorrect. At the time of the ejection, the Guardians were leading, 3-1. The Guardians ultimately won the contest, 3-1.

This is Brennan Miller (55)'s 1st ejection of 2023.
Meanwhile, in Anaheim, HP Umpire Alex Tosi was nearly perfect, calling 173 of 174 taken pitches in accordance with the computer. The one disputed pitch was located within our margin of error.

This is the 5th ejection report of the 2024 MLB regular season.
This is the 1st coach ejection of 2024.Ejection Tally: 1 Manager, 1 Coach, 3 Players.
This is Minnesota's 1st ejection of 2023, 1st in the AL Central (MIN 1; CLE, CWS, DET, KC 0).
This is David Popkins' 1st ejection sinceAugust 24, 2023 (Cory Blaser; QOC = Y [Balls/Strikes]).
This is Brennan Miller's 1st ejection sinceSept 9, 2023 (Alejo Lopez; QOC = N [Balls/Strikes]).

Friday, September 15, 2023

MLB Ejection 226 - Alex Tosi (2; Bryce Harper)

HP Umpire Alex Tosi ejected Phillies 1B Bryce Harper (strike two call; QOCN) in the top of the 3rd inning of the #Phillies-#Cardinals game. With two out and none on, Harper took a 2-1 fastball from Cardinals pitcher Zack Thompson for a called second strike before striking out on a subsequent pitch. Replays indicate the 2-1 pitch was located over the outer half of home plate and above the midpoint (px -0.41, pz 3.45 [sz_top 3.18 / RAD 3.30 / MOE 3.38]), the call was incorrect.* At the time of the ejection, the Phillies were leading, 4-0. The Phillies ultimately won the contest, 5-4.

This is Alex Tosi (66)'s 2nd ejection of 2023.
*This pitch was located 0.84 vertical inches from being deemed correct.

This is the 226th ejection report of the 2023 MLB regular season.
This is the 91st player ejection of 2023. Ejection Tally: 102 Managers, 91 Players, 33 Coaches.
This is Philadelphia's 11th ejection of 2023, 2nd in the NL East (MIA 14;PHI 11; NYM 6; ATL, WAS 3).
This is Bryce Harper's 3rd ejection of 2023, 1st sinceJune 23 (Mike Estabrook; QOC = Y [Check Swing]).
This is Alex Tosi's 2nd ejection of 2023, 1st sinceApril 21 (Bud Black; QOC = U [HBP]).

Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Legal Plate Blocking in SD & Peace Keeping in CHI

In this twofer, we look at a reviewed-and-confirmed home plate collision rule/blocking no-call in Miami-San Diego and 1B Umpire and Crew Chief Dan Bellino's game management in Seattle-Chicago. Padres manager Bob Melvin unsuccessfully challenged HP Umpire Alex Tosi's out call at home, as Replay Review confirmed Marlins catcher Nick Fortes was legal in blocking home plate to tag out Padres baserunner Fernando Tatis.

We compare and contrast this play to Padres catcher Gary Sanchez's plate blocking violation in San Francisco earlier this season, that resulted in an ejection. The key is how the catcher sets up, as moving into the path in a legitimate attempt to field the throw, similar in theory to the runner's lane, requires that one was initially positionedlegally in order to "exit" the legal position, so to speak. Fortes was initially legal, whereas Sanchez was not.

In Chicago, the Mariners were in the midst of a blowout of the White Sox. Mariners batter Jose Caballero was hit by a pitch by Brent Honeywell and the two teams chirped at each other, instructed by the umpires to knock it off. Subsequent batter Ty France then hit a foul fly ball near the Mariners dugout and 1B Umpire Bellino hustled to get in between the oncoming White Sox fielders and the visiting team in the dugout, just in case any left over theatrics remained.

Video as follows:

Friday, April 21, 2023

MLB Ejection 023 - Alex Tosi (1; Bud Black)

HP Umpire Alex Tosi ejected Rockies manager Bud Black (HBP call; QOCU) in the bottom of the 4th inning of the #Rockies-#Phillies game. With none out and two on (R1, R2), Phillies batter JT Realmuto took a 1-2 sinker from Rockies pitcher Noah Davis for a hit by pitch, called by HP Umpire Tosi. Replays do not conclusively indicate whether or not the batter was struck by the ball, the call was irrecusable. At the time of the ejection, the Rockies were leading, 3-0. The Phillies ultimately won the contest, 4-3.

This is Alex Tosi (66)'s 1st ejection of 2023.

This is the 23rd ejection report of the 2023 MLB regular season.
This is the 11th manager ejection of 2023.
This is Colorado's 2nd ejection of 2023, T-1st in the NL West (LAD,COL 2; ARI, SD 1; SF 0).
This is Bud Black's 1st ejection sinceAugust 2, 2022 (John Tumpane; QOC = N-c [Replay Review]).

Thursday, September 22, 2022

Teachable - Tosi's Toasty Pickoff Play

Mets pitcher Carlos Carrasco's snap pickoff throw to first base might have caught baserunner Nathaniel Lowe off the bag, but 1B Umpire Alex Tosi was there to observe New York first baseman Dominic Smith's quick tag and instinctively call the runner out, a call confirmed via Replay Review following a Texas challenge.

AsTmac reviews in thisTeachable Moment, Tosi trusts his eyes (and possibly ears) to come up with an immediate out call, spying the fielder's glove making contact with the runner's right knee prior to the runner's left foot returning to touch first base.

The moral of the story is through experience, umpires can learn to trust their instincts to assist in quick-reflexes plays such as this one.

Video as follows:

Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Teachable - Historic Triple Challenge & Tosi in the Middle

Phillies interim manager Rob Thompson scored a historic feat this season during a Nick Castellanos at-bat, challenging three elements of one play via Replay Review—an umpire's catch/trap call, a base touching appeal (leaving early) call, and an out/safe tag call—during a game at Citizens Bank Park.

With none out and two on (R1, R2), Phillies batter Castellanos hit a drive intodeep right field, with Braves right fielder Adam Duvall diving in an attempt to catch the sinking fly ball. 1B Umpire Quinn Wolcott ruled a catch, and Duvall quickly threw the ball back to the infield, where baserunner R1 Rhys Hoskins was tagged out between first and second, and runner R2 Kyle Schwarber was called out for leaving second base early (failing to timely tag up) and prior to the outfielder's first touch of the ball.

Upon Replay Review as the result of Thompson's multi-pronged challenge, the Castellanos air out stood, Hoskins' tag out was confirmed, and Schwarber's base touch was overturned, averting a triple play.

In thisTeachable Moment, we watch Wolcott's responsibility relative to catch/no catch calls in right field, as well as 2B Umpire Alex Tosi's multiple responsibilities at second base, which include the plays on R1 Hoskins, R2 Schwarber's tag up, and, oh yeah, keeping tabs on whether the ball was caught, and when that occurred.

Video as follows:

Saturday, June 25, 2022

2022 No-Hitter 3, Alex Tosi (1; HOU Combined)

HP Umpire Alex Tosi called the Houston Astros' combined no-hitter vs the Yankees in New York, joined by 1B Umpire Mike Muchlinski, 2B Umpire John Libka, and 3B Umpire and Crew Chief Todd Tichenor.

Tosi officiated Cristian Javier, Hector Neris, and Ryan Pressly's combined no-hitter with a net accuracy of 96.9%.

This is Alex Tosi's first career MLB no-hitter.

The UEFL f/x look:
Balls: 114 called balls outside strike zone / 3 called balls within strike zone = 114/117 = 97.4% accuracy.
Strikes: 42 called strikes within strike zone / 2 called strike outside strike zone = 42/44 = 95.5% accuracy.
Total Raw Accuracy Score: 156/161 = 96.9% accuracy (+3 NYY [Favored New York by 3 pitches]).

Monday, June 6, 2022

MLB Ejection 063 - Alex Tosi (1; Rocco Baldelli)

HP Umpire Alex Tosi ejected Twins manager Rocco Baldelli (foul ball/strike/check swing call) in the bottom of the 7th inning of the #Yankees-#Twins game. With none out and one on on, Twins batter Max Kepler attempted to check his swing on a 0-0 sinker from Yankees pitcher Wandy Peralta, ruled a foul ball by HP Umpire Tosi. Replays indicate the bat did not make contact with the ball;play was reviewed and adjudicated by the UEFL Appeals Board (7-0), the call was correct. At the time of the ejection, the Yankees were leading, 8-4. The Yankees ultimately won the contest, 10-4.

This is Alex Tosi (66)'s 1st ejection of 2022.
Alex Tosi now has 5 points in the UEFL Standings (1 Prev + 2 AAA + 2 Correct Call = 5).
Crew Chief Jim Reynolds now has 5 points in Crew Division (4 Previous + 1 Correct Call = 5).

This is the 63rd ejection report of the 2022 MLB regular season.
This is the 32nd manager ejection of 2022.
This is Minnesota's 2nd ejection of 2022, T-1st in the AL Central (DET, KC,MIN 2; CWS 1; CLE 0).
This is Rocco Baldelli's 2nd ejection of 2022, 1st sinceMay 14 (John Tumpane; QOC = Y [Obstruction]).
This is Alex Tosi's first career MLB ejection.

Wrap:New York Yankees vs. Minnesota Twins, 6/7/22 | Video as follows:

Saturday, May 11, 2019

Major League Debut of Umpire Alex Tosi (66)

Umpire Alex Tosi made his MLB debut during Saturday's Tigers-Twins doubleheader in Minnesota, serving as 1B Umpire alongside HP Umpire Hunter Wendelstedt, 2B Umpire Jordan Baker, and 3B Umpire Nauert for Game 1, and as 3B Umpire alongside HP Umpire Chad Whitson, 1B Umpire Baker, and 2B Umpire Nauert for Game 2.

Tosi is a crew chief on the2019 International League umpire roster, which is his fourth year in Triple-A. Tosi has officiated the New-York Penn (2011), Midwest (2012), Florida State (2013), Arizona Instructional (2014), and Eastern (2014-15) Leagues in addition to the International League (2016-present).

He officiated the2018 Triple-A National Championship Game,2017 International League Postseason, and his multiple MLB Spring Trainings.

Tosi wears the sleeve number 66, which was last worn at the Major League level by Jim Joyce, whoretired following the 2016 MLB season and was our featured guest onEpisode 12 ofThe Plate Meeting podcast.

Tosi is the third rookie fill-in umpire to make his MLB debut during the 2019 regular season.
Related PostMajor League Debut of Umpire John Bacon (70) (5/2/19).
Related Post:Major League Debut of Umpire Brennan Miller (55) (4/20/19).

Tosi's most recent MiLB assignment was the May 9 Buffalo-Gwinnett game at Gwinnett, where Tosi took third base responsibilities alongside HP Umpire Ryan Wills, 1B Umpire Skyler Shown, and 2B Umpire Sean Barber.

Sunday, February 26, 2017

Much Patience and Good Judgment - Reversing a Call

In officiating, patience and timing are key. In baseball, umpires are trained to fully process plays before issuing a judgment decision. Most of the time, patience and timing make an appearance during the play itself, but sometimes, the patience to get the call right shows up only after the play is over.

After initial out, Tosi correctly changed a call.
In the top of the 4th inning of Saturday's tied White Sox-Dodgers game, Sox baserunner R1 Yolmer Sanchez attempted to steal second base as second baseman Logan Forsythe attempted to tag Sanchez before Sanchez's foot touched second base, generating an out call from 3B Umpire Alex Tosi.

One slight issue arose when it became clear that Forsythe hadnot caught his catcher's throw and the ball was rolling along the infield dirt, resulting in Sanchez's hasty retreat to first base (he had started jogging back toward the White Sox's first base dugout after Tosi's out call and picked up his pace after seeing the loose ball).

Jean Segura also had an adventure.
Sanchez's actions tend to remind us of Brewers baserunner Jean Segura,who famously stole second base in 2013 before running back to first base, and then later tried to steal second base again during the same baserunning appearance. The only difference between the Sanchez and Segura plays is that 2B Umpire Phil Cuzzi hadn't incorrectly declared Segura out: Segura onlythought he had been declared out.

Tosi, on the other hand, actuallydidincorrectly declare Sanchez out. Thus, after calling "Time" and convening crewmates Lance Barrett and Pat Hoberg, Tosi changed his call to "safe," and placed Sanchez on second base, ruling that had the proper call (of "safe") been made, that is the base that Sanchez would have reached.

What does the rulebook say about this? Rule 8.02(c) states, "If the umpires consult after a play and change a call that had been made, then they have the authority to take all steps that they may deem necessary, in their discretion, to eliminate the results and consequences of the earlier call that they are reversing, including placing runners where they think those runners would have been after the play, had the ultimate call been made as the initial call."

Although Rule 8.02(c) is a failsafe for mistakes, the General Instructions to Umpires section of the code seeks to prevent premature calls: "Keep your eye everlastingly on the ball while it is in play. It is more vital to know just where a fly ball fell, or a thrown ball finished up, than whether or not a runner missed a base. Do not call the plays too quickly, or turn away too fast when a fielder is throwing to complete a double play. Watch out for dropped balls after you have called a man out...Wait until the play is completed before making any arm motion."

Video:Confusion in Cattleback thanks to an out call, dropped ball, and missed tag (LAD; 1:11:19)

As Dodgers broadcaster Charlie Steiner remarked, "It's Spring Training for everybody," though Tosi's premature call places him in the company of other MLB greats, such as Greg Gibson, whose early out call at Dodger Stadium in 2012 occurred during a game-deciding sequence of events.
Relevant Post:Greg Gibson Reminds All Umpires: Patience is a Virtue (7/15/12).

With two out and two on (R2, R3) in the top of the 9th inning of the July 14, 2012 Padres-Dodgers game, the Dodgers were all set to win their 10th straight contest at home against San Diego as the Blue Crew clung to a 6-5 lead. Closer Kenley Jansen had worked methodically and—much to Joe Torre's chagrin, I'm sure—slowly to a two-strike count and was considering which pitch to throw for his final strike of the game.

Gibson prematurely punches out Cabrera.
Padres baserunner R3 Everth Cabrera, alertly, saw Jansen's full focus on pitching and not on the runners, so when Jansen turned his back to home plate and ventured behind the pitcher's plate, Cabrera pounced, catching Jansen off-guard. Jansen's throw to catcher AJ Ellis was high, but Ellis jumped for it and slapped a tag on Cabrera just before the Padre's foot slid into home plate.

"Out!" exclaimed plate umpire Greg Gibson, emphatically seeking to end the game in thrilling fashion.

The only problem, of course, was that Jansen's throw had evaded Ellis and the baseball was not in AJ's glove, but rolling around freely in foul territory.

Upon realizing this—partly due to Cabrera's protest of the out call—Gibson reversed course, signaled Cabrerasafe, and extended the game. For better or for worse, all this added confusion allowed the runner fromsecond base Will Venable to score the go-ahead and winning run as Jansen arrived late to cover the plate. Controversially, replays indicate Jansen did not hustle to cover the plate until after Gibson had reversed his improper call, and Venable was already within several strides of home plate.

Remember the General Instruction to Umpires: "It is often a trying position which requires the exercise of much patience and good judgment."

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