Mets unsurprisingly responsible for weirdest pitch clock violation of Opening Day
Opening Day this season meant MLB playing its first regular-season games under the influence of the pitch clock on Thursday. The New York Mets, perhaps unsurprisingly, were responsible for the clock's weirdest moment.
The fun came in the sixth inning of the Mets' opener against the Miami Marlins, when Jeff McNeil was up to bat with teammates Pete Alonso on first and Starling Marte on third. McNeil began the at-bat against Marlins ace Sandy Alcantara with a foul ball, and then things got weird.
As McNeil prepared to face Alcantara again, home plate umpire Larry Vanover stopped play and hit McNeil with another strike. The crime wasn't McNeil's, though. Instead, the umpires were penalizing Alonso for not returning to first base quickly enough after the first-pitch foul ball.
The Mets, from McNeil to Alonso to manager Bud Showalter, were not happy with the decision, nor was the Mets' SNY television booth.
Jeff McNeil was given a strike by the plate umpire after Pete Alonso took too long getting back to first base pic.twitter.com/GbEb8ch6gD
— SNY (@SNYtv) March 30, 2023
A clip from the Marlins broadcast showed what made Vanover hit McNeil with the strike, as Alonso took about 15 seconds after the pitch to return to first base.
Here's a good angle from the Marlins broadcast of the automatic strike called on Alonso.
McNeil fouls a ball off, Alonso makes his way to second base but doesn't get back to first base quickly enough so an automatic strike is called. pic.twitter.com/sQQOaaL4N3— Alex Fast (@AlexFast8) March 30, 2023
It's unclear what Vanover's reasoning was, but the slate of rules introduced by MLB this season give umpires a significant amount of discretionary power in deciding what constitutes a violation.
Fortunately for the Mets, the extra strike didn't matter, as McNeil singled two pitches later to score Marte and put the team up 3-0. The Mets eventually notched a 5-3 win to begin their season 1-0.