 This video's from a little bit ago, the Phillies were playing the Dodgers, they were up to nothing, but the Dodgers have two runners on in the fifth inning, trade turners up, they're threatening. A little behind the scenes. I make these videos, sometimes I edit a ton of them, and I feel like the timeliness is gone, and this one's been sitting on my timeline for a while, and in the past I usually just scrap these because I feel like I missed the moment, I missed the window. On some places that matters, on some it doesn't. YouTube doesn't seem to care, Facebook definitely doesn't care. On Twitter, there will always be people replying like, this is so long ago, blah, blah, blah. But I like making videos, and I edited it, so I'm just going to roll with it. We'll see how it goes. It's about the umpires, and it's a good one about the umps, I think. A lot of people suggested this. First pitch, that's a nice pitch, in there for a strike. Next pitch, swinging. 0-2 to Trey Turner, that's inside, and so inside the runner's advance, you don't want to do that, because now you can score a run on an out, 0-2 pitch, waste job, not great. Up the middle, Didi makes the play, backyard Brad with the snag, ump calls them out, but there's a reason this got suggested as often as it did. One, two big fan bases that request breakdowns a lot. Two, when they went to replay, it really looks like Brad comes off the base and does not catch that ball, and it's not an out. Looks like his foot gets pulled off once the ball's in the glove, and it kind of does, but it kind of doesn't. This guy's sweating it out, wondering what's going to happen. It's a big moment in the game, need to stay cool and smart, need to stay hydrated, smart. He's just drinking some water through his bald head. Brad's looking at the replay, everyone's looking up, the umps come back, and they say, yep, we got it right. He's out, and everyone's shocked in live time. The announcers for both teams don't understand what happened. It's hard for my eyes to go from, when does it touch the leather? I'll tell you when it's off. He's off. He's off now? Well, it's, yeah, he's off then, period. Yeah, how did, I don't get it. Yeah, no, he's off. I don't know what they didn't see. We'll take it. I don't know. He was off right there. Let's take a look at what I think the umpire saw in New York. So there's the ball in the glove, right? And now the ball doesn't have to hit the back pocket. It just needs to be in the webbing of the glove, which I always thought was really weird that they made the replay rule that because when you, when you're taught how to call out at first base, you stare at the base and you listen for the ball to hit the glove. And that's how you make the call listening to the ball hit the glove, watching the foot hit the base. And if you're listening for that, that means that we're counting it when the ball hits the glove, not when it just enters it. So I always was confused why they made it, but at this freeze frame, the ball is in the glove there. And then we slide over to his foot and I think they're going to say, that looks like it's still on the base to me. That looks like there is one frame where the ball's inside his glove. It hasn't hit the back of the glove yet and the foot's on the back. I'm guessing because then if you play it a little bit, you can see the foot then does come off the back. But at this point, it's not unclear. The foot may be on the bag there. It looks like it is. And at that point, the ball is in his glove. Foot glove, foot glove, foot glove. We're dancing, we're dancing, we're dancing. So I think they got it right. I mean, in the spirit of the rule, the fact that replay is going frame by frame, I think the umps got it right, but this got requested a ton because both announcers were like, how'd they get that wrong? Maybe they didn't get it wrong. The rule's odd, but I think that rule, they got it right. Anyway, Dodgers got one run, but they ground out afterwards. That's the video. See you guys.