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Why don't Tyler Callihan's Reds-Braves catch the arm injury?

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The thoughts and prayers of the teammates and fans of Cincinnati Reds were together with the rookie Tyler Callihan after the outfield suffered a broken left forearm when he tried to start in the left corner of the Monday opening against the Braves in Atlanta.

The Reds manager Terry Francona asked the decision without catching. A home run in the inside was ruled by the Braves' Matt Olson. John Sadak from Fanduel Sports Network had to say, while Francona Home Plate referee Chris Segal asked about the decision on the review that Callihan did not caught the ball.

“Terry Francona makes a very reasonable argument here,” said Sadak. “How is it not a catch? I mean, he does the hook and you can see how he gave his body in this game. It seems like a hook. And then he succumbed to what everyone would do under these circumstances. So it is a Homer for Matt Olson.”

“This is an unfortunate circumstance up to,” added analyst Jeff Brantley. “Now you just have to group new and be aggressive (if you are the red). It's all you can do.”

A short time later, Sadak and Brantley agreed that the referee and the evaluation center missed the call that should have been dominated as a hook.

“Word from the repeat center for our production truck, which quotes the definition of a catch that the publication of the ball must be voluntary and intended, it was not there,” said Sadak. “I understand it, and that is the letter of the law. This child – that looked very ugly. We don't know exactly what happened. We will find it out tonight or tomorrow when tests are carried out … but cowboy, there is some feeling for me. We saw.

“I do it too,” said Brantley. “Whenever you have something like this, especially when it comes to a gift of two runs, the favor of the good will get in my swing.”

“Obviously not a fun game,” said the starting jug Brady Singer after the game. “Suck for him. I feel bad for him. But I can't thank him enough for the effort. I will take every day on the field, fight for the ball and make this piece, I mean, it speaks volumes to him. And I am very grateful that he is exhausting his effort. And I hope he is fine. Ghost.”

“You have now divided him and he is in the clubhouse. We will send him back to Cincinnati in the morning to set up the operation. He had a few bones there in his forearm. … There is no good way to explain it,” Francona told reporters. “The child runs with full explosion and tries to do everything to save runs. … we will repair it. I mean, he is young. And he will be fine. It will only take a while. We cannot see it where we are.

Francona said he had no opportunity to watch the repetition to determine whether it was a catch.

“As I understand it, he was caught, but he couldn't present it and it rolled out of his glove,” said Francona. “That's why they got the piece alive … … I understand. Only, it is disappointing. But I understand it.”

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