As the accused party, Max Scherzer offered about as compelling a defense as anyone on his side could ever hope for. He was passionate, he was patient, he repeatedly explained that he followed the umpires’ instructions and even washed his hands in front of an MLB official.
He went so far as to say he told umpire Phil Cuzzi that he swore “on the lives of my children” that he didn’t do anything with the baseball that could be construed as cheating.
Yet that didn’t keep Cuzzi from ejecting Scherzer before the bottom of the fourth inning at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday.
But it convinced me. At least in the moment.
Look, it’s hard not to love everything about Scherzer. His intensity, his work ethic, his leadership. He had as much to do with changing the Mets’ clubhouse culture last year as Buck Showalter, and some of that would seem to come from personal integrity.
As such, I was ready to make this all about Cuzzi appointing himself as the sheriff determined to enforce MLB’s crackdown on sticky substances, since he is the only umpire to have thrown pitchers out for being in violation of the three-year old rule.
But then I read the quotes from home plate umpire Dan Bellino, who joined Cuzzi in examining Scherzer’s hands and glove during the fourth inning in Los Angeles on Wednesday.
And they are persuasive in their own right.