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USATC

New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge protested against the Toronto Blue Jays on Monday night. He looked at the Yankee hole Before reliever Jay Jackson hit a deep home run.

Here is the general sequence of events:

Sometimes poets try to look late to find out where he’s pitching, and that’s not against the law. But this looks like a quick look into the Yankee dugout, and it led to speculation that this umpire might be doing it, so to speak, to get a stolen signal passed to him. After the game The judge said he was distracted by some “shouting” in the visitor’s dugout..

But on Tuesday, the plot thickened a bit.

Toronto manager John Schneider said his team is working to make sure they don’t unwittingly tip opponents, and asked the club to look into the MLB. Whether the Yankees’ base coaches sometimes sit outside their assigned boxes in foul territory.

More:

Yankees manager Aaron Boone The team has spoken with the league office but said an investigation is not expected..

Schneider doesn’t seem to fully believe the judge’s explanation for the side view:

As for Judge, he drew attention to whatever he was doing in the Blue Jays’ broadcast booth a day later — nothing, of course:

Whatever the truth of the matter, the initiative has increased the focus on the competition for diversity among competing interests. The Yankees and host Jays will play the second game of a four game series on Tuesday night. The Yankees have won seven of their last 10 and are one game behind the third-place Jays.



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