Is Major League Baseball involved in a cover-up or effort to bury the story about the blown call that allowed Matt Holliday to score the winning run vs. the Padres in the 2007 National League wild card playoff game?
It just wouldn’t be the Internet without a crackpot conspiracy theory so this idea is just crazy talk, but, is it really that impossible? Or maybe it just looks like a cover-up as a result of the media not wanting to anger MLB by showing that umpires are fallible. One thing that has struck me is the lack of any major TV or media outlet showing any video clip or photograph that they claim shows conclusively that the safe call was incorrect. This fact hasn’t escaped Tim McClelland, the home plate umpire who called Matt Holliday safe. In a recent interview with Dan Patrick, McClelland used some curious logic to defend his call.
McClelland: I feel that I… got the call right. (pause) Because I’m not sure that there’s a replay that shows that I got it wrong so I think I got the call right. (pause) I believe I got the call right.
McClelland basically maintains that he “got the call right” because there isn’t a replay that proves him wrong. Of course McClelland forgets to mention that there also isn’t a replay that proves him right either. Think about that. It’s been four days since the disputed play and there has still been no definitive proof of the call yet released by MLB or any media outlet. Somehow, even with a multitude of TV cameras and full complement of photographers covering the game, nobody has yet managed to come up with a single photo or video that exonerates McClelland and proves that his safe call was correct. I guess we are supposed to believe that nobody managed to get a clear shot of the play? Sure. It’s the bottom of the 13th and the winning run is about to score and nobody got the shot? Are we supposed to think that all the cameras were somehow magically not focused on the one spot where they all should have been pointing? Or do we chalk this up to the ineptitude of the TBS crew? And while there may be no single replay that gives you a clear shot (there is no Questec system at Coors and if there was I suspect Selig would have ordered the footage burned) its easy to see that Holliday never touched plate if you combine the views from multiple cameras)
To find any potential motivation for MLB to suppress the story you only have to look at the NFL and NBA. MLB doesn’t need a scandal to compare with kennel owning QB’s and point shaving Referees. With the playoffs in full swing, MLB doesn’t want to have a controversy over the quality of officiating and the media is reluctant to start that firestorm since they have nothing to gain from it and instead they are sweeping the whole thing under the rug and hoping it will go away. I’m not the only one to have this thought. Check out this quote from Bleeding Pinstripes, a New York Yankees blog.
TBS had their baseball post-season debut tonight with this play-in game, and it ends, well…wrong. What do you do? Here they are, wanting to show everyone that they can cover this celebration, trying to prove that they can hang with their new coverage team. So there is the last play of the game, called dead wrong by home-plate ump Tim McClelland. And they are glossing it over so it doesn’t ruin their story. Sure, they mentioned it, and they’re admitting that it was wrong, but this is the story, boys. Sorry it’s not what everybody wants, and sorry it’s going to make MLB extremely uncomfortable over the next few days, probably longer.
In the wake of the recent Mike Winters suspension, MLB doesn’t need more bad coverage of the umpires and its a certainty that the media knows this. And while we don’t know why every media outlet is giving MLB and TBS a free pass on the issue of the blown safe call, we can guess that they are either censoring themselves, that they don’t consider that a blown call determining who gets in the playoffs is newsworthy, or it has been been “suggested” to them that they bury the story.
If McClelland did blow the call, and I think he did, I don’t believe it was on purpose or with any malice. He just made a huge mistake at a time when it couldn’t be overlooked or swept under the rug. In all fairness, if this blown call happens during the regular season, or in the middle of a game, it gets forgotten relatively quickly. But since it was the call that decided the game between San Diego and Colorado in the bottom of the 13th its just not going away anytime soon and you just can’t make the story disappear as much as MLB would like it to.
Tags: Conspiracy?, MLB, McClelland, TBS by admin
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