 We just had a wild finish to this Mets and Marlins game. It's two to one Mets are losing three more outs and the game is over. McNeil goes, I think I'll just hit an absolute bomb home run. Tie this up real quick. 3-1 fastball into the upper deck to tie the game in the bottom of the ninth. Those guys brutally missed that high five. Let's go. He's got the ball. Look at that. Tosses his bat, hops down the first baseline. Gotta love it. Then my dude, Girmay, he gets on. Well, infield hit, beats it out. Nice play by Birdie. Bounced the throw, but he's on first. Then they shift all the way over for Nimo, thinking he's going to pull the ball. So he just slaps it the other way. Now the Mets are going to have runners on second and third. One out. So they intentionally walk lendoor. He looks at the dugout and says, let's go. Let's get it. And Conforto comes up, who's been struggling. They wanted this match up. He attacks him in the zone. Conforto immediately goes down 0-2. He battles that. Fouls it off. Battles that. Fouls it off. He's going to take this ball high. And now here's where things get very fun and interesting. It's a strike in the zone. The ump rings him up. Oh, wait. He says, oh, no, that's a hit by pitch, which would mean an RBI hit by pitch. I really run bad at it. But look at this. And I mean, never one of the more clear cut. He leaned into the pitch I've ever seen. The rule doesn't say you can't lean into the pitch. The rule says you have to try to avoid getting hit. So that says about as brutal as you can do that, because he did not try to avoid getting hit. He tried to get hit. Umpire Ron Culpa, famous for saying the words, I can do whatever I want, starts to ring him up. Then says, oh, no, oh, no, oh, no, probably heard both sounds off the elbow pad. Lindor is going to make out with them. Dom Smith is going to get him wet. The Mets are celebrating. It's kind of an awkward celebration. Donny baseball is like, hold up, hold up, hold up. This game can't be over. Culpa, I'm guessing, is saying here, like, do you want me to review if he got hit by a pitch? I can't review if he did it intentionally, but I can review if he hit him. And Madden's like, just go review everything. And then they review it and they say, yep, play stands. And it's not that they, Madden's like, what? And it's not that they reviewed it and said, no, he didn't intentionally get hit. That per rule is not a reviewable play. And you can see my dude, Mickey Rojas, right here saying, like, you can review that. And Culpa says, I can't review it. Why not? And then Culpa just says, I don't know. It's not my fault. And Rojas, the gentleman, he says, okay, all right, I'll leave you alone. And he walks away. And then Donny baseball comes up to Rojas and he goes, could you see? And he goes, yeah, I can see with my eyes. I saw the whole thing. Clear as day. He leaned into the pitch. Wild finish. So it's a walk off hit by pitch for the Mets on a strike three pitch. Walk off hit by pitch on strike three. The cool thing is that Trevor May is on the Mets. Miguel Rojas is on the Marlins. Both those guys have a podcast on the John Boy Media Network, the Chris Rose rotation. So we're going to hear about this from both sides. Make sure you get ready to tune into that because I am very interested to hear what Rojas, who we saw in this video and Trevor May, who pitched in this game, have to say about this.