Again, it was a bit shocking that New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone didn’t get ejected from his team’s game against the Boston Red Sox on Friday. Boone, who already has four ejections on the season. He often argued balls and strikes and Friday night would’ve been no exception as umpire Hunter Wendelstedt had a rather controversial strike zone.
The Twitter account Umpire Scorecards, which rates each home plate umpire’s performance after every Major League Baseball Game, noted that Hunter Wendelstedt had a rough performance behind home plate.
According to Umpire Scorecards, Wendelstedt was 91 percent accurate and 93 percent consistent during Friday night’s game. That is below the league average in both categories and 3.1% below what would be expected in terms of accuracy. Wendelstedt made 5.1 fewer correct calls than the average umpire
He also called just 83% of called strikes correctly, compared to the league average of 88%.
Umpire Scorecards estimates that the Yankees benefitted about o.53 runs in the game. This is a bit ironic, considering they lost 15-5 to the Red Sox. But New York was on the wrong end of Wendelstedt’s most impactful missed call. This wasn’t the most impactful call in terms of the largest changes in run expectancy. Since the Yankees were down 13-1, it was an impactful call nonetheless.
According to Umpire Auditor, Wendelstedt had the largest miss low on a called strike this season. In the sixth inning, Wendelstedt called a strike to Giancarlo Stanton, that missed the plate low by 5.56 inches.
Yikes.
Overall, it wasn’t the worst performance of the year by an umpire in Major League Baseball, but Wendelstedt missing a strike that low—no matter the score—is certainly notable. And those in the world of Major League Baseball seemingly agree, based on their reactions on social media:
[Umpire Scorecards, Umpire Auditor] Image from Reinhold Matay/USA TODAY Sports
About Sam Neumann
Since the beginning of 2023, Sam has been a staff writer for Awful Announcing and The Comeback. A 2021 graduate of Temple University, Sam is a Charlotte native, who currently calls Greenville, South Carolina his home. He also has a love/hate relationship with the New York Mets and Jets.
Recent Posts
NBA gets call to kick Knicks owner out of league
“He’s so thin-skinned. His ego is so fragile, he can’t take any kind of criticism."
Cubs owner responds to backlash Matt Shaw received for attending Charlie Kirk’s funeral
"Charlie’s murder was something that shook a lot of us to the core."
Zohran Mamdani addresses connection to Mets losing streak
"I will accept being addressed as Mayor Mambino for the day."
Articles
Which 5 teams face the most pressure in the 2026 NFL Draft?
Dave Portnoy on LeBron James: ‘Probably a Hall of Famer’
“I have long laid down my sword."
New Caitlin Clark drama emerges from first day of training camp
"Of course, day one drama."