Tuesday’s loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks was undoubtedly a tough pill to swallow for the Mets. After allowing the D-backs to erase a 4-0 lead, they had another chance to slam the door shut in the bottom of the 10th.
But Arizona fought back for a 6-5 win, with the tying and go-ahead runs coming on a Josh Reddick double down the right-field line off of Trevor May.
The ball was ruled fair initially and then confirmed via replay, though it’s still tough to see if the ball actually caught any of the line.
May said after the game that he had a pretty clear view.
“It’s foul, still is to this moment, in my opinion,” May said. “But they saw whatever they saw.
“The call is the call, that’s the way the game goes. Same thing, balls are balls when they’re called balls and strikes are strikes when they’re called strikes too. It’s just the way the game goes sometimes. They didn’t really have a good look. There’s one camera that was watching, evidently. … It’s tough, hard to deal with.”
“Tough to say. I’ve got to stick to what they saw,” Luis Rojas said when asked about the call. “I know they have more angles than we do at the (Replay Center) … The only angle I got to see on the big screen was that side angle from like the first-base side, so I couldn’t really tell much. Either way we’re going to challenge it. It’s the end of the game, but we didn’t get any other angle.
“We’re just going to respect what it was at this point.”
After Edwin Diaz blew the save in the bottom of the ninth, Rojas turned to May to finish things out with a 5-4 lead in the 10th.