

Winning an Emmy doesn’t always come with a rulebook for basepaths or a mute button for emotions. At Fort Lee American Little League, the spotlight recently shifted from players to a certain assistant coach with a flair for theatrics. Let’s just say when the umpire made the call, he made the scene. Because sometimes, the biggest drama isn’t on the airwaves—it’s behind third base.
Looks like the MLB managers are getting some competition from the Little League managers on who can get tossed out in the best possible way. And with the recent alleged ejection, the Little League might have just taken the edge. And according to reports, this was a messy one.
It was reported by Awful Announcing that Brandon Tierney allegedly got tossed out of a Little League game. They posted, “Brandon Tierney allegedly tossed from Little League Baseball game.” Although there has been no official news, there have been many sightings.
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Brandon Tierney doesn’t just talk sports — he feels them, loudly and unapologetically so. Whether in the WFAN studio or coaching ten-year-olds on a dusty diamond, his intensity never takes a timeout. He’s passionate, fiery, and often teetering on the edge of confrontation, but that’s his brand. As Boomer Esiason put it, “He wants passion. He speaks of passion, and he brings the passion.”
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Brandon Tierney allegedly tossed from Little League Baseball game https://t.co/HWWOlCMkmx
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) July 17, 2025
That passion boiled over during a recent 10U Little League game, where Tierney clashed with umpires, and one of them was a female. According to a caller, “BT came out charging,” disputing two separate calls in a game-ending sequence. Though only the assistant coach, Tierney’s fury earned ejections for both him and the head coach. Their appeal was denied, resulting in both sitting out the next game, like suspended pros.
The WFAN airwaves lit up with chuckles, disbelief, and a healthy dose of classic locker-room roasting. Gio admitted, “It doesn’t sound good,” while Boomer deadpanned, “He’s yelling at both umpires, though.” Listeners called in with confirmation, turning the show into an unexpected courtroom drama. As irony would have it, Tierney might have just coached himself into a Yankees audition.
If the ejection wasn’t official, the drama certainly was—and it’s already a Little League legend. Between fiery dugouts and WFAN debates, Tierney’s passion has officially crossed state lines and age groups. Maybe this was a meltdown. Maybe it was managerial training in disguise. Either way, when assistant coaches start trending, you know the umpire didn’t stand a chance. After all, why wait for October when Fort Lee has its own postseason energy?
What’s your perspective on:
Did Brandon Tierney's fiery passion cross the line, or is this just classic sports drama?
Have an interesting take?
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Forget Little League, Brandon Tierney is going after top MLB stars
When the dugout dust settles and the mics turn off, some coaches just can’t help themselves. Fort Lee American Little League’s most spirited assistant, Brandon Tierney, isn’t stopping at ten-year-olds or basepath tantrums. Now, he’s setting his sights on Major League Baseball—because why critique from the studio when you can challenge the stars directly? If Little League was the warm-up, MLB might want to tighten its helmets.
Even though Aaron Judge is the face of the Yankees, his bat feels caged. With the rest of the lineup sputtering, pitchers are dodging him like it’s open season. “Judge has been intentionally walked 20 times this year. Last year? 20 the entire season,” Brandon Tierney noted, underlining just how much opponents are choosing avoidance over confrontation. Without reliable threats behind him, Judge’s influence is shrinking—even as his presence looms large.
Brandon Tierney didn’t sugarcoat the Yankees’ reality: “They’ve got to figure out how to protect Aaron Judge.” Opponents are exploiting the lineup’s dead zones, turning Judge’s at-bats into strategic pauses. “It’s definitely not Stanton at this point,” Tierney added, ruling out a once-feared slugger now mired in mediocrity. His fix? Move Judge to the two-hole and “hope that Bellinger is in the early stages of heating up.”
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From Fort Lee to the Bronx, Brandon Tierney’s scouting report comes with a side of sass. The Yankees don’t just have a Judge problem—they have a jury of underperformers behind him. Until someone swings with conviction, opponents will keep issuing four-pitch verdicts. Tierney’s diagnosis is blunt, but the prognosis is clear: protect the star or risk dimming his spotlight. Because even in MLB, it turns out Little League instincts die hard.
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"Did Brandon Tierney's fiery passion cross the line, or is this just classic sports drama?"