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Brewers pitcher gets ejected for having a blatantly obvious foreign substance on his arm

Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Will Smith
Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Will Smith

(John Bazemore/AP) That's not supposed to be there.

Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Will Smith is the latest pitcher to be ejected for having a foreign substance on his body during a game.

The incident came in the seventh inning with the Brewers trailing the Atlanta Braves 2-1. Smith faced one batter before Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez came out and asked the umpires to check him.

The umpires met, checked Smith's arm, and then quickly and nonchalantly ejected him from the game.

Your browser does not support the video tag. Fox Sports South

Smith acknowledged after the game to having the substance, in this case a mixture of sunscreen and rosin, while warming up in the bullpen, and he said he forgot to wipe it off before entering the game.

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"It was chilly and kind of windy," Smith told the media (via the AP). "I had rosin and sunscreen on my arm. I just forgot to wipe it off before I went out and pitched. I had to kind of get ready in a hurry. I just forgot. That's it."

Gonzalez didn't buy that argument, noting that he did not ask the umpires to check Smith until he saw him touching that area of his arm with his pitching hand between pitches.

Smith was livid as he left the field, presumably because he got caught doing something that lots of pitchers do.

Your browser does not support the video tag. Fox Sports South

"It's very common," Brewers manager Craig Counsell said. "It goes on on the other side, I guarantee you. It's the rule. I think pitchers are using it, but I guess you've got to be discreet about it."

And that was Smith's problem. His use of the foreign substance was anything but discreet, as it was easily visible on television.

Will Smith foreign substance
Will Smith foreign substance

(Fox Sports South)

This was reminiscent of the time Yankees pitcher Michael Pineda was ejected for having an obvious glob of pine tar on his neck during a game last season.

Michael Pineda
Michael Pineda

(AP)

Pineda was ejected and was later suspended 10 games.

This latest incident once again has the baseball world up in arms. Some people feel one pitcher is being singled out for something a lot of pitchers do, and many don't care and even encourage the practice. In other words, using something to get a better grip is something many feel should be legal.

The argument for not caring, and the growing movement to make it legal, is based on three points:

  1. Pine tar and the sunscreen/rosin mix are just used to get a better grip on the baseball, something some batters appreciate as it means pitches will be less wild and less likely to hit them.

  2. Pine tar and the sunscreen/rosin mix presumably do not alter the behavior of the ball the way Vaseline (i.e., spitballs) does.

  3. Everybody is doing it.

Even Braves first baseman Freddie Freeman came to Smith's defense saying after the game, saying: "Every pitcher does it so they'll have a better grip so we won't get hit in the head."

The problem is point No. 3 above. It's almost certainly not true that every pitcher is doing it, which means as long as it is illegal, some pitchers are indeed gaining an advantage by having a better grip than those who choose to follow the rules.

After Pineda was ejected last year, ESPN's Buster Olney argued that MLB needed to approve a substance that pitchers could use to get a better grip on a slippery ball.

"It's time for [MLB] to identify a substance they will approve for pitchers so that they can improve their grip on the baseball," Olney argued. "Something that can be for them what pine tar is to hitters."

This does seem to be the growing sentiment in baseball. But until that happens, pitchers are at risk of getting caught, getting ejected, and being suspended. No matter how many other pitchers are doing it, that hurts your team.

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