Boston Red Sox

See All 21 Ball-Strike Calls the Umpire Missed in the Red Sox-Astros ALCS Game 4

The most pivotal missed call came in the top of the ninth inning, when the score was tied at two and Red Sox pitcher Nathan Eovaldi threw a pitch that caught the corner of the strike zone

This graphic shows all 21 ball-strike calls ALCS Game 4 umpire missed originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

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It's never a good look for Major League Baseball when the home plate umpire is trending on Twitter, but that's what unfolded during Tuesday night's Game 3 of the American League Championship Series between the Boston Red Sox and Houston Astros at Fenway Park.

Every umpire is going to get a few calls wrong, that's human nature. And the league clearly is OK with that because it hasn't instituted robot umpires or some sort of computer system to call balls and strikes.

But it's a problem when 21 calls are missed, which was the case with Laz Diaz during the Astros' 9-2 win Tuesday night. ESPN's Jeff Passan tweeted an eye-opening graphic detailing each of those 21 mistakes.

The most pivotal missed call came in the top of the ninth inning. The score was tied at two and Red Sox pitcher Nathan Eovaldi threw a pitch that caught the corner of the strike zone, which should have resulted in Jason Castro striking out and the inning ending. 

Traditions come and go as sports teams change and evolve, but new Red Sox traditions like laundry cart rides should go the distance.

Instead, Castro got another chance and he made Eovaldi pay with an RBI single to center field that put Houston on top 3-2. The Astros poured it on from there and went into the bottom of the inning up 9-2.

Earlier in the game, J.D. Martinez struck out on a pitch way outside the zone (pitch No. 7 on the graphic below):

We're in October. Each of these teams is two wins away from the World Series. The stakes are almost as high as they go. The MLB needs to put its best umpires behind the plate in these games to ensure the players themselves have the most profound impact on the outcome.

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