 Oakland down big in this game, down big on the season, but Ryan Noda needs to get his hacks in, get his at bats in, feel good about himself. This breakdown is brought to you by DraftKings. First pitch, curve ball fouls it, foul, umpire throws the ball back, feels cool about how he did it. Follows the curve ball up with a fast ball strike. Noda doesn't like it, kinda shakes his head. He's like, ah, look, watches it. And he's like, nah, ah, oh man, yeah, that was in. I'm just like, yeah. And then he steps back and he calls time. They only get to call time once this season. A lot of players are using it after calls they disagree with as kind of like a way to let the ump know like I disagreed with that. Anyway, I noticed that. A lot of the Yankees are doing that. Oh, and two's the count now. He steps back in. What's the pitcher gonna go with? High fast ball, ball number one, inside curve, ball number two, two and two. He goes back to the outside fast ball, swinging a miss, he's frustrated. He's ejected. What? He doesn't even know he's ejected. He's got no clue. He's just walking back like, damn, that's a bummer. Now if you really wanna know what's going on here, in his mind, he thinks the first pitch wasn't a strike, it was a ball, but it was a strike. He's wrong. So now he's thinking, I have to protect the outside part of the plate even though I think it's a ball. I have to swing at it. So he swings at the pitch cause it's a mirror of the one that got called a strike that he thought was a ball. You know, they're both strikes and he's frustrated and after his swing he draws a line in the dirt. That's what the umpire sees. He sees, the umpire knows he's frustrated cause he shook his head, he called time out. And then he knows that it's a similar pitch as the one he was frustrated with and then the umpire sees him draw a line in the dirt which is a big no-no. So it's immediate ejection. Yeah, that's a big, you can't do that cause you're kinda telling the umpire like this is where that pitch was and you're showing them up. The only problem is you didn't really show him up this time cause nobody noticed it or saw it but the umpire, but the umpire also doesn't know that. From his point of view, he drew a line saying that's how outside that pitch was and that is a no-no. Now, Noah's gonna say, I was just kind of like frustrated but I don't know, it looks like a line throwing to me. He says, he drew a line. I did, I saw it. He's like, well, when was he even? No, he drew it at home plate. I saw it, he turns to the other arms. Did you see him draw a line? He's just walking back. Noah's like, what? I got ejected? For what? What did I do? And the other arms like he did. He did draw a line. I saw it as well. And now the umpire, look at the look he gives Noah to. Look at this. He's like, dude, no, Tony, I'm not even talking to you, dude. You can't draw a line in my face like that. I'm out. Now umpire just walks away cause he's so insulted. Can't even have that happen. And then they're talking and they're like, maybe a day, he's a fucking bullshit. I don't know. Do you think he drew a line game on? Or do you think he just kind of fell over? Cause what he says, he's like, yeah, I just swung and then I finished my swing and my bow was on the ground. But I don't know, seemed like a line to me. Another thing I just wanna share with you is how different these strike zone boxes are. It's kind of wild. So this is the A's box and this is the Red Sox box. And look how different they are. Same angle. They're like a ball different on the left and right side of the screen. Kind of bizarre. Anyway, thank you to DraftKings for sponsoring this video and thank you to you guys for watching it. Appreciate DraftKings as always. Appreciate you guys as always. And if you enjoy the breakdowns and you wanna watch more and get notifications and all that, you can subscribe and enjoy them. Thanks.