A seemingly ordinary game between the Detroit Tigers and the New York Mets unexpectedly turned into MLB chaos when coach A.J. Hinch erupted in a rare fit of rage in the middle of Citi Field following a highly controversial replay review decision.
And in just seconds, things spiraled out of control.
Hinch was ejected from the game in the fourth quarter after the MLB Replay Command upheld Gage Workman’s third-base out – a situation where numerous camera angles on the stadium screens appeared to show the Tigers player was safe.
The scene that followed caused an uproar at Citi Field.
“Not me. You’re gone!”
Detroit was leading 3-0 and had a chance to extend their lead. Zach McKinstry hit a bloop single to shallow left field, leaving Gage Workman hesitant between holding onto second or rushing to third.
Workman ultimately decided to accelerate, and Mets left-fielder MJ Melendez threw a powerful shot to third base. Brett Baty tagged Workman in an extremely close situation. Umpire immediately called out.
The Tigers immediately challenged.

And then chaos ensued.
The camera angles on television, social media, and especially the giant screens at Citi Field led many to believe that Workman had touched the base before the tag. But after a lengthy review process, the MLB Replay Command still declared a “call stands”—upholding the original decision.
A.J. Hinch went berserk.
From the dugout, he began yelling at home-plate umpire Jordan Baker. Microphones on the field even captured Baker’s brief but tense response:
“Not me. You’re gone!”
Immediately afterward, Hinch stormed out of the dugout in unprecedented rage.
This was not the familiar image of A.J. Hinch.
For years, he had been considered one of MLB’s calmest and most emotionally controlled managers. Since taking over the Tigers in 2021, Hinch has rarely had such “old-school baseball” outbursts.
But this time, he couldn’t take it anymore.
“They showed it on the board,” Hinch said after the game, emphasizing that the entire stadium was watching the replay from multiple angles. “If they did that, I would defend my team.”
What angered Hinch wasn’t just the decision.
It was the feeling of powerlessness.
In an age where replay technology is designed to reduce controversy, the Tigers felt betrayed by the very system they were working with.
The most painful thing for Detroit was that everything started falling apart almost immediately after that ejection.
The Tigers went into the fourth quarter with a 3-0 lead and complete control of the game. But just minutes after the controversy, the Mets launched a fierce counterattack with a series of home runs to win 9-4 and complete a sweep at Citi Field.
Brett Baty initiated the comeback with a two-run homer. Juan Soto, Mark Vientos, and Marcus Semien then crushed the Tigers’ pitching staff.
Detroit has now lost eight of their last nine games – an alarming slump for a team that had such a promising start to the season.
And now, this controversial replay review could become symbolic of that entire crisis.
Ironically, replay reviews were implemented by MLB to eliminate these kinds of chaotic moments. Under MLB rules, if a manager continues to argue after a replay review, they are almost automatically ejected.
But Hinch’s case raises an old question:
If millions of replay viewers saw the player as safe, why did the decision remain unchanged?
Social media exploded almost immediately after the game. Many fans, including those who didn’t support the Tigers, felt Detroit had been unfairly treated.
Some analysts have called this “one of the most baffling replays of the season.”
Many believe that behind that outburst of anger was more than just an umpire decision.
It was also the pent-up frustration after a series of lackluster performances by the Tigers.
Detroit was once considered a dark horse contender in the American League, but now the team is in freefall. The offense lacks vitality, pitching is becoming inconsistent, and team morale is noticeably low.
Perhaps that’s why Hinch exploded.
Perhaps he was trying to create an emotional shock to wake the Tigers up.
Because sometimes in baseball, an ejection isn’t just anger.
It’s the desperate signal of a manager trying to save the season before everything completely collapses.
In an age where baseball is increasingly controlled by technology, “old-school” outbursts like Hinch’s are becoming rarer.
But precisely because it’s rare, it shook the entire MLB.
From a seemingly harmless bloop single… everything turned into a massive debate about replays, umpire, and faith in the system.
And for the Tigers, perhaps the most painful thing wasn’t the 9-4 loss itself.
But the feeling of watching the game slip away… helplessly.