 Mets her up by two versus the Marlins, two strikes on Alonzo, puts that in play, gobbled up over at third, thrown across, and he is out. After the dramatic pause by the first base umpire, Alonzo walks back to the dugout, stop, says Buck, Alonzo says, okay, all right, why? And this is the image that everybody saw and that everybody tweeted, everybody's talking about, and I probably made it the thumbnail because this is the image, right? He's clearly safe. The foot is off the bag. Upon review, the call in the field stands, the runner is out, we want this as the challenge. Wow. Wow, what? His foot's off the bag. How could the call stand? If anything, you thought it was gonna be overturned because they confirmed it. Well, the thing that you need to remember about these reviews, and I don't agree with this really, but the rule is that it's a consider to catch when the ball enters the glove, not when the ball hits the back of the mitt, which is what you would think it would be because usually they always make that call on sound. So right there is actually the point because the ball has entered the mitt at which you need to see if his foot is on the base or not. And at this point is his foot on the base. Now they didn't say they confirmed the call, they just said it stood. What do you think? Now I don't know, it could very well be off the base, but as we slide, then it comes off the base there. That's the graphic in the footage everyone was sharing and be like, how did they get this wrong? But if you go to the where it actually counts, and the fact that his foot slides off there actually might lead you to believe that it was on there, which is when the ball counts according to the rule, again the rule that I don't really like, but that is how it's stated unless they changed it in recent years that once the ball enters the glove. So if you take a look at the other vantage points we're looking at right here is his foot on. Well, no idea. There's just zero way to tell from that one at all. And then this is the other one we have. And the ball enters right there and is his foot on? Maybe, maybe not. It's definitely off right there, but that context tells us nothing. So that's why this call was not confirmed nor overturned. I'll read you, the call on the field stands, the runner is out. It just stands. So whatever that dude over at first base who made the call, whatever this guy says right here, that was going to be the call.