NEW YORK —
Smith was stopped for a routine check as he reached the infield. Within moments, several umpires and teammates were huddled around the right-hander, and Mets manager Buck Showalter came from the dugout to join the discussion.
Smith held out his pitching hand and pleaded his case, but he was ejected by first-base umpire Bill Miller, the crew chief. The Mets will be a player short during the suspension.
“Drew Smith was ejected because he had sticky hands,” Miller told a pool reporter. “I don’t know what’s on his hand; all I know it was sticky — sticky to the touch. It stuck to my hands when I touched it. Not only his pitching hand, but his glove hand, as well.”
Miller said Smith’s hand was the stickiest he has felt this season and that the other three umpires agreed.
“I think if something’s sticky, it’s illegal,” Miller said. “They cannot manipulate the rosin. They can’t use foreign substance. I don’t know what was on his hand. But his hand was sticky to the touch, where my hand stuck to his hand.”
Mets pitcher Max Scherzer, who started Tuesday night, served a 10-game suspension after being ejected April 19 at Dodger Stadium. Scherzer claimed it was simply a mix of sweat and rosin, nothing illegal.
“I look in the mirror and go, ‘OK, are we doing something wrong that we need to fix?'” Showalter said Wednesday. “That’s my first thing you got to look at. It’s like instead of it always being somebody else’s fault, somebody singling you out or picking you out. Are you doing something wrong?”
New York Yankees pitcher Domingo German was ejected from a May 16 game at the Toronto Blue Jays for using a foreign substance on the mound and suspended 10 games by MLB the following day.
After MLB began cracking down on foreign substances in June 2021, the Seattle Mariners‘ Hector Santiago and Arizona Diamondbacks‘ Caleb Smith served suspensions for illegal sticky substances.