Home plate umpire Ron Kulpa made an absurdly bad strike call against Tampa Bay Rays shortstop Wander Franco to give the Red Sox a break early in Game 4.
The MLB playoffs should be all about the best teams in the league battling for their postseason lives.
Too often, games in the playoffs become about the same things that mar too many regular-season games: Terrible umpire performances.
During Game 4 of the ALDS between Boston and Tampa Bay, home plate umpire Ron Kulpa gave his submission for the worst strike call of the season.
https://twitter.com/PitchingNinja/status/1447702703837261829?s=20
The pitching chart for the first inning Wander Franco at-bat is so bad itās almost funny.
We're here to see Wander Franco. We're not here to see Ron Kulpa.
ā Bill Koch (@BillKoch25) October 11, 2021
The plate umpire must have forgot (6). #RedSox pic.twitter.com/nMpzmKcMEV
A longer video showed the Rays shortstopās harsh reaction to the call. He wasnāt happy about it.
One of the worst strike three calls youāve seen all year and 20-year-old rookie Wander Franco letās the ump know he blew it https://t.co/0Bmmy5dNQ7
ā Jomboy Media (@JomboyMedia) October 11, 2021
Wander Franco struck out thanks to Ron Kulpaās terrible call
That wasnāt even the only call Franco had go against him early in the game. The umpires called a runner safe on a throw he made to first base. Fortunately, replay review was able to get that one right in the end.
Do the umpires have something against Wander Franco? Clearly out and they got it right after review https://t.co/KuvIh7lmjV
ā Talkinā Baseball (@TalkinBaseball_) October 11, 2021
Replay can step in to make up for a questionable call at first, but there is no reprieve for a strikeout based on the tallest strike zone possible.
The problem is leaning on home plate umpires who havenāt done a good job all year with assignments during the biggest games. According to Codify, Inc., ā79 umpires worked the plate in at least 20 regular season games this season and only one had a lower accuracy rate than this umpire (and just barely).ā
You get out what you put in, MLB.