Major League Baseball internally deemed umpire Hunter Wendelstedt’s Monday ejection of Yankees manager Aaron Boone a “bad ejection,” a source briefed on the situation tells SNY.
That confirms Boone’s “I think the league is upset about it” comment on Jomboy Media’s Talkin’ Yanks podcast. The skipper also said that he had “no recourse” and had “no idea” how the wrong could be righted.
Indeed, while discipline of managers for bad ejections plays out publicly via suspensions issued by MLB senior vice president of on-field operations Michael Hill, the process for umpires is less clear.
So, we endeavored to find out. Here’s the answer:
Umpires are evaluated on every game for balls, strikes and other calls -- but also for “game management.” A bad ejection falls under the latter category.
If an umpire has a bad evaluation for a game, it impacts the evaluation on his body of work for the season (similar to how an F on a test will impact one’s grade for the entire semester -- it’s not insurmountable, but won’t help).
Season evaluations determine whether umpires receive desirable assignments to the All-Star Game and the postseason. All of those assignments bring extra pay. Evaluations also factor into promotions to crew chief.
Wendelstedt is not a crew chief, and he did not receive any postseason assignments in 2023.