HOUSTON — After the game was over and tempers had cooled, Rocco Baldelli made the short walk down the hall to the umpires' locker room on Tuesday night, to have a post-mortem discussion about the play that caused crew chief Todd Tichenor to eject him.
"It was good for me, and they were up for that conversation, too. They were very open to really talking through the aspects of what was going on," said Baldelli, whose objection when umpires informed him that he had been charged with a mound visit while dealing with an on-field staredown between the teams, and therefore must remove pitcher Aaron Sanchez, earned him his fourth ejection of the season. "It's fair to say that both myself and the umpires probably assumed some things on that play. Obviously we weren't all on the same page."
Baldelli, who also conferred with Mike Hill, MLB's senior vice president for on-field operations, said he was disappointed that the umpires didn't make sure, given the turmoil on the field, that he was aware they had ruled his brief discussion with Sanchez constituted a visit.
Baldelli said he did not know what was going on and "[no one in our dugout did. We were literally just getting back into the dugout from an on-field altercation. Normally, all we do is look at the umpires constantly for signals. This is one thing we do constantly. But we had literally just gotten back into the dugout. Nobody, myself included, thought that it would be considered a visit, so we weren't looking for any signals."
He and the umpires found common ground, the manager said, so that such a misunderstanding won't happen again.
"It was good to actually walk through it," Baldelli said. "It gave multiple people in that room things to think about going forward."
Correa's business
He snuck it in at the end, almost unnoticed amid all his fond memories of his time in Houston and his gratitude to the Astros. Carlos Correa closed his welcome-home news conference Monday with an oath of loyalty — OK, maybe more like a bit of salesmanship — to the Minnesota Twins.
"I'm with the Twins right now, and the goal is to build something special with the organization and hopefully be here long-term," Correa said when asked if he could ever be an Astro again. "Right now I see myself playing with the Twins for a long time."