New York Yankees second goal player Jazz Chisholm was expelled from Thursday evening’s 6-3 victory against Tampa Bay Rays (box score) after disagreeing with a removal call from home referee John Bacon. Chisholm (or whoever manages his social media account) did not wait long after to disseminate his frustration on social networks, tweet: “Not even (creepy) near !!!!!” About five minutes after being sent to the showers. He then deleted the message.
On Friday, MLB announced that Chisholm had been suspended for a match and sentenced to a fine for having violated the players’ social media policy for players. Yankees manager Aaron Boone said Chisholm was calling for the decision and is aligned on Friday evening for the Yankees match against the Rays.
Here is an overview of the call in question. This occurred at the top of the seventh round, Chisholm sporting a complete count compared to the Gaucher Mason Montgomery lift.
According to Trumedia data, this field had a probability of a strike called 19.3%. (In an interest in equity: Chisholm benefited earlier in the bat, when he received the ball three on a land which had a probability of strike called 92.6%.)
After the match, Chisholm told journalists that he had felt anything that he had said before being ejected deserving punishment, although he conceded what he said After Probably did. Chisholm also said that even if he remained upset that Bacon missed the call, he was angry with himself to have lost his composure.
“I am a competitor, so when I go there and I feel like I am right and you tell me something that, I think, does not make sense, I will get started and be upset,” said Chisholm. “I lost my emotions, I lost my blood.
As New York Daily News wrote, Gary Phillips, the Chisholm tweet seems to violate the social media policy of the Association of MLB players. This policy can be consulted here in its form 2023. In particular, it prohibits players from using electronic devices during the games and / or “display or transmit content which questions impartiality or otherwise denigrates a major league referee”. The Chisholm position certainly seems to correspond to the invoice.
Chisholm, 27, entered Thursday by hitting .176 / .273 / .471 (112 ops +) with six circuits and four stolen bases. According to baseball, his contributions were worth around 1.0 victory over the replacement. Obtained in a trade last summer with the Miami marlins, Chisholm is an old All-Star who has an average of 3.2 war for 162 games for his career, which makes him a well absorbed player capable of contributing both power and speed.
The Yankees, after Thursday’s victory, are now 12-7 in the young season. The Jays Blue Toronto enjoying a day off, the Yankees have now extended their lead in the American League East in a full match.