Believe it or not, there was a time early in Aaron Boone’s managerial career when Yankee fans wondered if he was too passive, if he had enough fire.
Who knew that by his sixth year, Boone would become a modern-day Billy Martin or Lou Piniella?
On Thursday night in the Bronx, Boone was tossed in the third inning of a 3-1 Yankees loss to Baltimore for arguing balls and strikes. It was his second ejection in four games, third since May 10th and a MLB-leading fourth this season.
Boone has been ejected 30 times since he began managing in 2018, the most in baseball during that span.
First, to get the nuts and bolts out of the way on this one, Boone is unlikely to face suspension for this one despite home plate umpire Edwin Moscoso’s accusation that Boone was spitting in his face.
Physical contact with an ump merits a suspension, but in this case Boone was clearly just spraying while yelling, and not spitting intentionally. The only other contact came when crew chief Chris Guccione stood in front of Boone to restrain him from Moscoso (bench coach/suddenly part-time skipper Carlos Mendoza also stood in front of Boone to ensure he didn’t go any nuttier). Boone should not expect further discipline.
Zooming out, Boone’s fiery behavior carries two positives and one primary negative.
The positive: word is, Boone’s Yankee bosses have no issue with the semi-regular ejections, believing him to be an excellent manager and chalking the arguments up to his passionate engagement in the game.
Also, Yankee players appreciate that the manager sticks up for them. In this game, Moscoso was missing clear strike calls on pitches by New York starter Clarke Schmidt, and Boone spared a young player the stress of arguing for himself.