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The third baseman struck out looking in the bottom of the sixth inning and glared in the direction of umpire Junior Valentine before quickly raising his arm in the air.
The gesture fell well short of the required helmet tap to challenge a call, but Valentine nonetheless ruled that Baty had contested the strike, and the pitch was officially reviewed.
— Foul Territory (@FoulTerritoryTV) May 14, 2026The home plate umpire assumed Brett Baty was going to challenge, but Baty never actually tapped his helmet.
The Mets are now out of challenges. pic.twitter.com/lZqlSOFhze

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The called strike was quickly confirmed, as a confused Baty could be seen pleading his case to the umpire.
The bizarre sequence cost the Mets their final challenge of the game, and manager Carlos Mendoza wasted little time entering the field and arguing with Valentine’s interpretation of the moment.
“He saw that he went to the helmet. I think Junior is gonna go back and take a look at the film, and pretty sure he missed it, because he wasn’t even close,” Mendoza said after the game.
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