Reds' manager Dusty Baker was suspended for two games on Friday, following an altercation with umpire Eric Cooper on Thursday night. Bob Watson, baseball's vice president for on-field operations, handed down the suspension and a $1500 fine as he claimed that Baker made inappropriate contact with Cooper. Baker, who did not even receive a call from Watson before the ruling was made, was not happy.
"Isn't this America? What kind of judicial system do we have when we
don't have an appeal?" Baker asked. "Players get appeals (because of a
strong union), but coaches and managers don't get an appeal. You
shouldn't have to have a union to get an appeal. Everybody gets to go
to court, right? That's the part I don't understand."
"I've only been suspended twice in my whole
life, 58 years, and never in school or anywhere else — just twice in 58
years by the same man (Watson)," Baker told the Dayton Daily News.
The drama began to unfold during the seventh inning of the 8-2 loss Thursday, Edwin Encarnacion
was called out on strikes by Cooper for the second out and dropped his
bat at the umpire's feet in disapproval. Told to pick up his bat,
Encarnacion acquiesced and returned to the dugout.
The dispute resumed when Encarnacion took the field defensively
after the third out, and Cooper ran him. It was the first ejection of
the third baseman's career. The exchange became heated and Cooper eventually threw Baker out of the
game, too. Baker inadvertently dropped his cap but intentionally kicked
it after his ejection. The umpire filed a report with the league
office. Watson called general manager Walt Jocketty and Baker on Friday
and informed them of his decision.
Baker was told that he grazed Cooper with his left shoulder, which prompted the league's response, according to the team's website.
Chris Speier, the Reds' bench and infield coach, field in for Baker and managed his first game in
Cincinnati's 3-2 win over the Padres on Friday night. The win snapped
the club's four-game losing streak and gave the Reds their first win of
a seven-game West Coast road trip.
The punishment seems a bit harsh, but what is interesting is that unlike a player, Baker could not appeal as managers are not union members. Still, it's nothing like the 30 games Pete Rose was suspended for when he bumped umpire Dave Pallone in the chest in the late 1980's.
Umpires more often than not let their egos get in the way. A good umpire is one that goes unnoticed. Cooper was from acheiving that goal on Thursday night.