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Armando Galarraga Perfect Game LOST By Blown Umpire Call (VIDEO)

First Posted: 06/02/10 10:05 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:40 PM ET

Armando Galarraga Perfect Game Video

(LARRY LAGE/AP) DETROIT — Armando Galarraga of the Detroit Tigers lost his bid for a perfect game Wednesday night with two outs in the ninth inning on a call that first base umpire Jim Joyce later admitted he blew.

(SCROLL DOWN FOR VIDEO)

First baseman Miguel Cabrera cleanly fielded Jason Donald's grounder to his right and made an accurate throw to Galarraga covering the bag. The ball was there in time, and all of Comerica Park was ready to celebrate the 3-0 win over Cleveland, until Joyce emphatically signaled safe.

The veteran ump regretted it.

"I just cost that kid a perfect game," Joyce said. "I thought he beat the throw. I was convinced he beat the throw, until I saw the replay."

"It was the biggest call of my career," said Joyce, who became a full-time major league umpire in 1989.

Tigers manager Jim Leyland immediately argued the call and was joined by several of his players after the final out. Galarraga was trying to pitch the third perfect game in the majors this season.

Quick Poll

Is this the worst call in the history of sports?

Yes, the ump blatantly cost Galarraga a perfect game.

No. This is bad, but there have been worse calls.

Galarraga (2-1) was in complete control throughout the night. Then Donald's groundball became the flash point of the night, and perhaps the season.

After center fielder Austin Jackson made a spectacular catch on Mark Grudzielanek's leadoff fly in the ninth and Mike Redmond grounded out, Donald came up with two outs.

Galarraga caught Cabrera's toss and smiled, knowing what he'd just done. He held up his glove hand and started to make an out call with his right hand.

And then Joyce made his call. Galarraga looked stunned and Comerica Park went silent in disbelief. A couple of Tigers put their hands to their heads.

Galarraga quietly went back to work as the crowd started to boo. Cabrera continued to argue the call as Galarraga quickly retired Trevor Crowe for the one-hit shutout.

Joyce faced a group of hostile Tigers - led by Leyland - between the pitching mound and home plate after the final out and was booed lustily by the crowd of 17,738 as he walked off the field.

"I don't blame them a bit or anything that was said," Joyce said. "I would've said it myself if I had been Galarraga. I would've been the first person in my face, and he never said a word to me."

Roy Halladay of the Philadelphia Phillies pitched a perfect game Saturday night at Florida, and Dallas Braden of the Oakland Athletics did it against Tampa Bay on May 9. Until then, there had never been two perfect games in the same season in the modern era.

Colorado's Ubaldo Jimenez pitched a no-hitter, too, at Atlanta on April 17.

Galarraga struck out three and walked none, and was a most unlikely star. He was recalled from Triple-A Toledo on May 16 after pitching poorly during spring training, losing out in a competition for the final spot in the rotation to Dontrelle Willis, who was traded Tuesday, and Nate Robertson, who was dealt to Florida toward before the team broke camp.

The 28-year-old native of Venezuela had success in 2008, going 13-7, but he had done nothing quite like the masterful performance he had against the Indians.

He started with a 2-0 count against Crowe, then attacked the strike zone and kept most of the weakly hit balls on the infield.

Cabrera hit his 15th homer to give Detroit a 1-0 lead in the second inning and Magglio Ordonez had an RBI single in the two-run eighth.

Fausto Carmona (4-4) pitched well. He gave up three runs - two earned - on nine hits and no walks.

The Indians came close to getting a hit twice before their disputed single.

Galarraga almost became the first Tiger to throw a perfect game. Justin Verlander threw the sixth no-hitter in franchise history on June 12, 2007.

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(LARRY LAGE/AP) DETROIT — Armando Galarraga of the Detroit Tigers lost his bid for a perfect game Wednesday night with two outs in the ninth inning on a call that first base umpire Jim Joyce lat...
(LARRY LAGE/AP) DETROIT — Armando Galarraga of the Detroit Tigers lost his bid for a perfect game Wednesday night with two outs in the ninth inning on a call that first base umpire Jim Joyce lat...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elemental775
06:56 PM on 06/08/2010
The worst call I ever saw is when I was a kid watching Milt Pappas of the Chicago Cubs going for a perfect game. He had a full count on the 27th batter. He put a pitch right on the corner and the umpire called it a ball. I couldn't believe it. If I was the ump I would have told the batter that he had better swing because if the pitch is anywhere near the strike zone I would ring him up. The guy has a perfect game going and you're going to stand there and watch a pitch go by?
Pappas got the next guy for a no-hitter, but that is as close as you can come to baseball immortality.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
brettrobbins
03:13 PM on 06/07/2010
Yes, I'm going out on a limb and making it official: Galarraga bobbled the ball and only gained complete possession of it after the runner crossed first base (see my previous post below and my official "scoop" at http://galarragabobbledtheball.mlblogs.com/)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Brian Shields
04:22 PM on 06/07/2010
Totally agree. I've been saying since the day it happened he was bobbling the ball and didn't have complete control until after the runner was already safe. Glad I'm not the only one who saw it correctly
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
brettrobbins
04:52 PM on 06/07/2010
Same here. As soon as I saw the video I couldn't believe it wasn't apparent that he didn't have complete possession until the runner had already touched the base. The batter touches the base and then a split second later the ball is bobbling around and then is finally secured in the web of the mitt. Again, I don't have a dog in this race: I just think it's unfair to put the ump through the grinder when it turns out his call was right, albeit (and ironically) for a different reason than he thought!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
brettrobbins
02:39 PM on 06/07/2010
(NEWS FLASH?)

Is it possible that Galarraga didn't have complete possession of the ball at first base?

Don't answer yet, don't judge yet, just WATCH--PLEASE WATCH--the following clip from 4:00-4:10:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XFs7LtTQmkA&feature=related

I don't have a dog in this race: I'm not a fan of either team, so don't waste your time insulting me: I'm not trying to take away from the great feat of a great pitcher, I'm seriously asking this question.

Is it completely certain that Galarraga had possession of the ball before the runner hit first base?

(Don't jump to conclusions: watch from 4:00 to 4:10 in the clip above, then return)

Does it not look as though Galarraga was bobbling the ball and only gained complete possession of it after the runner had hit first base?

Or is it sufficient for the ball to be within the area of the web of the mitt although not entirely trapped within it until after the runner crosses first base?

I hope I'm wrong. I hope the answer to the question above is yes. I hope he really did pitch a perfect game. I'm just asking this question, not rhetorically but with genuine curiosity.
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01:46 PM on 06/07/2010
For those of you that say this was regular season and there have been worse calls, B$.

This was historic. This was the 3rd perfect game in about 30 days. This was the worst call ever. Last out of a perfect game and it was NOT EVEN CLOSE, he was out by a mile.

And the fact that Smokin' Bud Selig did not change it is criminal theft.

Worst. Call. Ever!

hk
09:15 PM on 06/06/2010
Sorry. This was a regular season game -- and it didn't even have playoff implications.

The Don Denkinger call in the ninth inning of game 6 (Cards up 1-0, 3 games to 2) the 1985 World Series between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Kansas City Royals was one of the worst calls ever. The Cards would have won the series if he made the right call. Denkinger blew the call and the Cardinals completely unravelled allowing the Royals to win game 6 (2-1) and then game 7.

Go ahead and do a Google search. It routinely is listed as one of if not the absolute WORST calls in the history of SPORTS in general.

I don't think this even rates in the top ten.
12:09 PM on 06/08/2010
Yep. That '85 series call will always be THE worst as far as baseball goes. It effectively took a championship from one team and handed it to another. Denkinger should have been through as an umpire after that.

This one by Joyce though should go down as second worst, considering the extreme rarity and accomplishment of pitching a perfect game.
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11:28 AM on 06/06/2010
Well one thing is for sure. Bud Selig is the worst commissioner ever. That should really be the poll. After Selig head in the sand approach to steroids and not reversing the umpires call, he is totally incompetent and a disgrace to the game.
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mivogo
Single standard truth and democracy
04:01 PM on 06/05/2010
There have already been two perfect games thrown this season, and this would have been the third. This classy but unknown pitcher will be remembered because of this long after the names of most of the perfect game pitchers have been forgotten, because of it's freakish nature, with the photo of the last out/non-out shown 50 years from now.
Galaragga's a good guy, and I hope he realizes how lucky he really turned out to be.
12:36 PM on 06/05/2010
Yes it was a bad call. But the worst call in history? If Galarraga wasn't on a perfect game it would have gotten a quick replay on Baseball Tonight and it would have been forgotten. Lets not sensationalize it here.
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01:48 PM on 06/07/2010
But it was a perfect game, that's the point and the amplifying factor here.

The fact that this was the last out in a perfect game and it was missed SO horribly is why this is the worst call ever.

Screw Bud Selig.

hk
08:06 AM on 06/05/2010
Armando Galarraga got robbed of a perfect game and made James Joyce infamous. Check out the trivia behind controversial calls in sports at http://www.inthenewsquiz.com/2010/06/trivia-behind-controversial-calls-in.html
01:11 AM on 06/05/2010
Worst call in the history of sports? Seriously?

While a perfect game is a great individual accomplishment. It is still just Baseball, a sport that is only played by 2 major countries in the world (US and Japan). Plus, it isnt in the playoffs.

Football (Soccer for you, Americans) is the world's sport, and with the World Cup around the corner, let us remember some blown World Cup calls. Like the Ref not seeing Maradona's Hand of God in the 1986 World Cup which Argentina then went on to win. Or how about the hand ball by Thierry Henry against Ireland in World Cup Qualifying.

Worst Blown Call? I dont think so.
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kevrob
World's biggest "Xanadu Soundtrack" fan.
08:17 PM on 06/04/2010
The hitter was called safe by the umpire. Galaraga threw a one hitter. Period.

Only really whiney complainy people would see otherwise.
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01:49 PM on 06/07/2010
Only blind people would defend that ump.

He threw a perfect game and it was stolen from him by that ump and Smokin Bud Selig.

hk
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maillady
10:43 AM on 06/04/2010
Bud Selig should do the right thing and reverse this call. Everyone can see that it was a mistake, and it isn't an ordinary game, so for once Bud, do your job, and rectify this mess.
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kevrob
World's biggest "Xanadu Soundtrack" fan.
08:15 PM on 06/04/2010
Geez. Not everything is fair. Not everything is up for a re-do. You have GOT to be a liberal.
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maillady
09:11 AM on 06/07/2010
What does being fair have to do with being a liberal? Can't you offer an opinion without name calling?
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Carcinogen
Objectivism isn't a philosophy, it's a cult
01:12 PM on 06/05/2010
Bud Selig should have given the commish job to G Dubya. We would all be better off (well, except for baseball).
08:02 AM on 06/04/2010
The real story here should not be the blown call, but how classy and professional the pitcher, Armando Galarraga, was about the whole thing. We have all seen pitchers and other ball players go berserk over far less trivial calls, but this man appeared to be the least upset out of everyone. Bravo to him, I say.
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earlyblue
05:31 AM on 06/04/2010
I say reverse the call since it will not reverse the outcome of the game anyway. I perfect game is too rare, important and historical to allow a blown call to erase it. How amazing that we would have 3 perfect games already in one season before the All-Star break.
12:37 PM on 06/04/2010
Hear! Hear! In our heart-of-hearts, while not in the record book, we all know Galarraga threw a perfect game. Now we also know that he is the most gracious man in baseball. He scored a two-fer in my book.
03:53 AM on 06/04/2010
I'm glad Bud Selig did not reverse the call on the field. It's probably the only good decision he's made since he's been commissioner. The 1st base umpire should be ashamed, that was just a horrible call. In all honesty though, I've seen worse calls in more pivotal games. (But at least they were close, you protest.) Eventually, the respective league is forced to make available some sort of limited replay to assist in getting the right decision. It's hard to believe that the 1st base umpire didn't simply fall asleep on this one--it wasn't even close. And what were the homeplate and 2d base umpires doing? They have an obligation on this call as well; they should have been paying attention--so it's not just Joyce who messed up! I suspect, however, that Galarraga will have a place in history that he would not have had if he had thrown the 3d perfect game of a very short season. Nobody will forget this--even the more casual baseball fan.
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OC4Obama4Pres
12:31 PM on 06/04/2010
Reverse The Call.