Tony Vitello nets first MLB ejection as Giants fall to 3-7 - ESPN
SAN FRANCISCO — Giants' first-year manager Tony Vitello was ejected for the first time in his major league career Sunday during San Francisco's 5-2 loss to the New York Mets.
Vitello, who was the head coach at the University of Tennessee last season, argued with plate umpire Edwin Jimenez and third-base umpire David Rackley in the seventh inning after Jerar Encarnacion was ruled out for running inside the designated lane on his way to first base. Encarnacion hit a slow roller that reliever Huascar Brazoban grabbed and threw to Vientos, who dropped the ball, with the Giants leading 2-1.
«I was trying to give a correct answer to the umpire's explanation,» Vitello said after the loss, his club's third in a row. «I think I was basically just stating the rules at home plate. And I said one last thing out of frustration, or being all fired up, and it was complete nonsense.
»I think it was misinterpreted a little bit. But if you're on the field that long, and you're not a player, you're probably out of place a little bit."
Vitello likely isn't the only person in and around the Giants who is frustrated. San Francisco is 3-7 this season, and Sunday's loss pushed the Giants to just 1-6 at home. They opened the season last month by getting swept by the New York Yankees in a three-game series.
«I didn't watch the replay,» Vitello said of the play at first base. «Like I said, I saw it from a great angle. The umpire couldn't have been better with balls and strikes. I'm sure he got it, technically, right. But it's a play that I've got a lot of history for, and I was a little frustrated.»
In the following inning, pinch hitter Luis Torrens keyed New York's four-run rally with a two-run double, and the Mets eventually turned to their


