Looks like Make Baseball Fun Again 2016 is off to a fiery start. Bryce Harper has been leading this campaign all season, piggybacking off Jose Bautista's notorious bat flip from last postseason that started the generational gap conversation. Yesterday, Bautista found himself in the spotlight once again versus the same team his go-ahead homer eliminated last year.
The Toronto Blue Jays were visiting the Texas Rangers for the last time this season, so the Rangers decided to take the coward's way out (or so it would seem.) During Bautista's last at-bat in the top of the eighth inning, Texas pitcher Matt Bush decided it was time for a little bat flip revenge and drilled him. Fair enough, right? After a some staredowns, Jose took first base and everything was cool until he tried to break up a double-play. His slide was late, but not bush league by any stretch of the imagination. It is technically illegal this year thanks to the Chase Utely rule, but attempting to break up a double-play the way he did was textbook up until 2016. They teach you this in little league.
Rangers second baseman Rougned Odor didn't take too kindly to Bautista's effort and immediately stepped to him, said some words, tried to take Bautista's head off with a right cross to the jaw. Predictably, the benches cleared and baseball is becoming fun again; all because of Joey Batts. Check out our frame-by-frame breakdown of Sunday's brawl.
Looks like Make Baseball Fun Again 2016 is off to a fiery start. Bryce Harper has been leading this campaign all season, piggybacking off Jose Bautista's notorious bat flip from last postseason that started the generational gap conversation. Yesterday, Bautista found himself in the spotlight once again versus the same team his go-ahead homer eliminated last year.
The Toronto Blue Jays were visiting the Texas Rangers for the last time this season, so the Rangers decided to take the coward's way out (or so it would seem.) During Bautista's last at-bat in the top of the eighth inning, Texas pitcher Matt Bush decided it was time for a little bat flip revenge and drilled him. Fair enough, right? After a some staredowns, Jose took first base and everything was cool until he tried to break up a double-play. His slide was late, but not bush league by any stretch of the imagination. It is technically illegal this year thanks to the Chase Utely rule, but attempting to break up a double-play the way he did was textbook up until 2016. They teach you this in little league.
Rangers second baseman Rougned Odor didn't take too kindly to Bautista's effort and immediately stepped to him, said some words, tried to take Bautista's head off with a right cross to the jaw. Predictably, the benches cleared and baseball is becoming fun again; all because of Joey Batts. Check out our frame-by-frame breakdown of Sunday's brawl.
The Begininig
Matt Bush instigates the drama like a real messy bitch.
Joey Bats Is Salty
Joey Bats stares the Coward Matt Bush down.
Still Salty
Odor must've sensed Bautista's hunger for sauce.
Beltre Goes for Two
Nothing to see here, just a third baseman trying to go for two.
Bautista Tries to Do His Job
Jose Bautista still hasn't slid, so Odor knows to jump over him.
Bautista's Comes In Hot
Jose does his job.
Bautista Succeeds in Doing His Job
And makes Odor throw the ball away, effectively breaking up the double-play.
Odor Immediately Wants Some Sauce
He sensed it when he watched Jose stare his pitcher down.
This Odor Guy Is Confrontational
He must not like Jose because he turned around before he landed.
“You're Too Close, Mon”
*Die-Lan voice*
The Size Up
Rougned Odor already knew what time it was and Jose was looking like lunch.
Can You Spot the Glasses?
Oh my, they have seemed to disappear. Odor is not only a fighter, he's also a magician.
Perfect Form
Textbook follow-through. Look at his front leg and torso; perfect form. Also, his chain swung around his neck maybe 50 times per second:
The Glove Saves Joey Bats
Joey Bats is lucky Odor had a glove on because he would've went night, night.
Odor Wants More
Odor wanted more but everyone felt like he had enough food for the day.
"Don't Hold Me Back"
Adrian Beltre saved Jose's life by holding him back because Odor was out for blood and still had his glove on.
The End
The benches would clear again after Prince Fielder was plunked in the leg by Rangers pitcher Jesse Chavez on the first pitch in the bottom of the eighth.