July 5, 2024

MLB suspends Huston Astros pitcher Ronel Blanco for 10 games due to a foreign substance discovered in his glove.

Astros pitcher Ronel Blanco was handed a 10-game suspension on Wednesday for breaking Major League Baseball rules about using foreign substances.

Blanco got ejected from Tuesday night’s game against the Oakland Athletics. MLB’s senior vice president of on-field operations, Michael Hill, announced the suspension along with an undisclosed fine.


Houston’s general manager, Dana Brown, mentioned that Blanco won’t challenge the suspension. It was supposed to start Wednesday night against Oakland.

“At first, he thought about challenging it, but then he and his agent decided, ‘I want to get back out there. I won’t appeal this.’ And he’s moving forward,” Brown said.

Blanco had a strong start to the season, throwing a no-hitter in his debut and holding a 4-0 record with a 2.09 ERA. Since the Astros have a six-man rotation, Brown expects Blanco to miss just one start.


Ronel Blanco walks off the field
“Ronel Blanco is a good guy,” Brown added. “He’s worked hard to earn his spot in the starting rotation. He sees it as, ‘I don’t want to be sidelined. Let’s get back to pitching.’”

Blanco got thrown out at the beginning of the fourth inning in a 2-1 win against Oakland after umpires found a foreign substance on his glove. First base umpire Erich Bacchus described it as “the stickiest stuff” he’s ever felt on a glove.


Third base umpire and crew chief Laz Diaz ejected Blanco after checking his glove before he even pitched in the fourth inning. Umpires, Blanco, and Houston manager Joe Espada gathered at the mound for a few minutes to discuss the issue before Blanco was ejected.

Bacchus mentioned that there was nothing on Blanco’s glove when he checked it in the middle of the first inning, but he found the substance during his second check before the fourth inning.


“I felt something inside the glove,” Bacchus said. “It was the stickiest stuff I’ve felt on a glove since we started doing this a few years ago.”

Once Bacchus found the substance, he called in the rest of the crew to confirm. “Everyone checked the glove to make sure we all saw the same thing, and he had to be ejected because he had a foreign substance on his glove,” Diaz said.

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