

It’s one thing to lose fair and square—it’s another to get mugged in broad daylight. The New York Yankees didn’t just drop a play; they watched the rulebook get rewritten mid-inning. Cody Bellinger, now in pinstripes, found out the hard way that logic is optional when umpires go rogue. If baseball is a game of inches, this call was missed by a mile—and somehow still counted.
Ok, the MLB has got to do something about this now. Even I could see that the call was wrong, and I am miles away from the stadium. Missing the strike zone is one thing, but a wrong call on a force out is just a disaster. What makes it even worse is that the call stood even after a review. And who better to report it than Jomboy Media?
In the Los Angeles Angels against the New York Yankees game, Cody Bellinger was called out on a force out, and the Yankees wasted no time in reviewing the call. And surprise, surprise, the call stood because the umpires thought they made the right call. To this, Jomboy Media reacted, tweeting, “Cody Bellinger was still called out even after review.” After this if i was a Yankees fan, i would be pissed.
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Yes, the call was close, but everyone could tell that Cody Bellinger was safe. This might not affect the game, but if the Yankees end up losing the game, it will be a hit, and that might start a butterfly effect. Umpiring in MLB has gone from shaky to scandalous this season, and accountability remains sorely absent.
Fans watching Cracker Jack admit they don’t understand the rulebook anymore, while MLB pretends it’s just a “human element” sport. But when blatant tag‑out errors rob teams of wins—and yet no one faces consequences—it becomes clear: the umpires’ union holds all the cards, and baseball is left holding the bag.
Cody Bellinger was still called out even after review 🤔 pic.twitter.com/EwM1MMThPO
— Jomboy Media (@JomboyMedia) June 19, 2025
We’ve seen it before—Jerry Meals botched a game‑ending call against the Yankees in 2012, directly costing them a win, and MLB quietly acknowledged the mistake, then moved on. More recently, veteran Doug Eddings drew blistering public criticism after egregious strike and checked‑swing calls in a Cubs‑Tigers game, yet remains unpunished. Meanwhile, MLB shrugs and says nothing’s wrong, even as these calls determine playoff fates.
This year? Just tune in: wrong calls pile up, players fume, but the league covers its ears. The situation is absurd—baseball’s integrity is at stake, yet the sport feigns ignorance. Until MLB demands transparency, installs accountability, and backs up the replay booth, we’ll keep watching bad calls decide good games—and the league will keep looking the other way.
And here’s the kicker—this isn’t just bad luck, it’s bad leadership dressed as tradition. When replay reviews become reruns of failure, it’s time for a rewrite. The league can’t hide behind nostalgia while games are ruined in real time. If MLB won’t fix the system, maybe the fans should start reviewing them. Because at this rate, the only thing consistent is the inconsistency—and even that gets called wrong.
Yankees fans want justice after a wrong call on Cody Bellinger
There’s frustration, and then there’s Yankee Stadium-level fury—and right now, it’s boiling over. Cody Bellinger didn’t just hustle; he got hustled by a ruling that defied both vision and replay logic. The Yankees watched a clear safe call turn into another chapter in MLB’s umpiring circus. If justice wears pinstripes, it’s currently stuck in a rundown between incompetence and denial.
One fan’s comment “You can see it’s hard to play to make on field. Replay booth has no excuse” came after Cody Bellinger was wrongly called out in the Yankees-Angels game. The on-field umpire’s mistake was understandable—bang-bang plays happen fast and leave little margin. But what shocked fans was the replay booth doubling down and refusing to correct the obvious. Bellinger’s foot clearly touched the base first, yet the original call bizarrely stood firm.
SMH. How do they not see this with all the technology they have in the replay center. 😡 pic.twitter.com/Wx5pfdrm5Q
— John C. Firkel (@JohnCFirk) June 19, 2025
“SMH. How do they not see this with all the technology they have in the replay center?” was the cry of every baffled Yankees fan after Cody Bellinger’s controversial out. The on-field umpire made a tough call, but that’s why the booth exists—to get it right. Instead, the replay center somehow missed what every slow-motion angle screamed: Bellinger beat the tag. With all that tech, they still managed to pixelate justice into oblivion.
One user’s “He also shoulda been out here too,” was a quiet nod to the strike zone chaos unfolding. Cody Bellinger got lucky earlier when two clear strikes were mysteriously called balls by the umpire. Throughout the series, the zone has shifted more than a knuckleball in a wind tunnel. Consistency’s gone missing, and fans are left decoding umpire moods instead of pitch locations.
“Don’t wanna hurt the ump’s feelings” was a sarcastic jab after Bellinger’s obvious out call was upheld. The replay showed his foot on the bag before the tag, yet the out still stood. Fans believe the booth umpires protect each other instead of correcting what’s clearly wrong on video. It’s as if accountability now depends on ego management instead of rule enforcement or basic eyesight.
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He should have been out on a runner interference anyway. He clearly threw his hand up in Neto’s face to affect the throw.
— Aron (@TheDudeAbides_x) June 19, 2025
“He should have been out on a runner interference anyway. He clearly threw his hand up in Neto’s face to affect the throw,” was one fan’s frustrated attempt to rationalize the chaos. As Bellinger slid in, his arm did come up—but interference wasn’t called, nor even considered. Instead, the replay booth focused on everything but the obvious out call that replays clearly showed was safe. With fans grasping for excuses, it’s clear faith in the system is fading fast.
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From sarcastic jabs to conspiracy theories, fans aren’t just mad—they’re exhausted by the déjà vu. The quotes paint a picture not of rivalry rage, but league-wide disbelief at how broken the system feels. When even high-definition truth can’t sway a decision, what’s the point of having a replay booth? MLB says it wants to “get the call right,” but only if it doesn’t bruise any umpire’s ego. Justice isn’t blind—it’s just stuck buffering in the replay center.
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