Willson Contreras turned a routine strikeout into a full-blown mess on June 30, and the Boston Red Sox paid for it with multiple ejections in their game against the Washington Nationals.
The trouble started in the second inning after Contreras took a called third strike on the sixth pitch of his at-bat against Cade Cavalli. As he headed back toward the dugout, Cavalli said something that clearly crossed a line. Contreras immediately came back toward the mound, jawing at him, and the benches emptied.
This wasn’t a quick, harmless clearing of the benches either. Contreras charged at Cavalli, and it took about five people to keep him from getting any closer.
When his helmet came off, he fired it into the pile during the scuffle. The confrontation never escalated into punches, but the intent was obvious.
Replay caught Cavalli telling Contreras, "sit down, boy," after the strikeout. Contreras took serious offense, and rightfully so. Interim manager Chad Tracy tried to step in and make the case for his player, but he ended up getting ejected as well.
It took more than 10 minutes for the umpires to sort through the aftermath. By the time the dust settled, Contreras, Nate Eaton and Nationals pitcher Miles Mikolas had all been tossed.
Eaton and Mikolas had gone after each other off to the side of the main scrum. Cavalli, despite being at the center of it all, stayed in the game.
The ejection was Contreras’ second straight game getting sent off. The night before, he was ejected for tapping his helmet - as if signaling for an ABs challenge - to show his frustration with a check-swing call from first base umpire Nic Lentz.
Contreras has played with his usual edge, and then some, over the last few days. The source of that extra emotion has been the devastating earthquakes that hit Venezuela on June 24.
On June 29, he honored his country with an extra-long home run trot after going deep off Mikolas in the series opener. It’s possible Cavalli saw that moment and took it personally.
In Other News...
Yankees May Have Found Their Best Shot At A Bullpen Fix
The Yankees keep searching for answers in the middle innings, and Yovanny Cruz has surfaced as one of the more intriguing internal options. The right-hander is back from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre after a stretch that included 2 1/3 scoreless innings in the majors and steady work in the minors, where he has posted a 3.18 ERA and missed enough bats to stand out in a bullpen that has been under constant stress.
For a club still navigating reliever uncertainty, Cruzs return is less about a single appearance and more about whether he can provide some needed stability at a time when every roster move gets viewed through the lens of the trade deadline. The Yankees have been trying to piece together reliable innings while other arms have wobbled, and another internal call-up gives them one more chance to find help without having to pay a bigger price on the market. [Read more 🡒]
Rays Make Another Annoying AL East Depth Move Yankees Fans Know Too Well
The Rays are back to a familiar kind of roster shuffle, bringing outfielder Austin Slater back on a minor league deal as they keep working the margins of their AL East depth chart. For a club that has long made a habit of turning over the same kind of veteran role players, Slater is the latest low-cost name to cycle through the system, and the Yankees have seen enough of that sort of move from Tampa Bay to know it can matter later.
Slater, 33, has already spent time with three organizations this year and has appeared in 28 games while struggling to get much going at the plate. He previously carved out most of his big league career with the Giants over eight seasons, and now Tampa Bay is betting there may still be a use for him if it needs a familiar bench piece down the line. [Read more 🡒]
Yankees Offense Just Reached A Breaking Point Fans Feared Most
The Yankees offense has gone from shaky to flat-out alarming over a recent four-game stretch, with the kind of missed chances and empty innings that make every absence feel bigger. Without key pieces in the lineup, New York has struggled to generate much of anything against the Red Sox and Tigers, and the results have only sharpened the focus on how thin the margin is when the bats disappear.
What makes the skid feel even heavier is that the Yankees had been hanging in there until the trip through Fenway, when the problems seemed to deepen and the whole attack started to look out of sync. At the same time, the club is still waiting for clarity on its injured stars, and the questions around health and coaching decisions are starting to hang over the lineup as much as the results themselves. [Read more 🡒]
