Edwin Diaz is facing a 10-game suspension after he was ejected from the New York Mets\' 5-2 win over the Chicago Cubs on Sunday night for having an illegal substance on his pitching hand.
Diaz was thrown out by crew chief Vic Carapazza before he took the mound in the bottom of the ninth inning.
\"I touched his hand,\" Carapazza said in a pool report after the game. \"Grabbed his hand. The substance was extremely sticky. Discolored ... it definitely wasn\'t rosin and sweat. We\'ve checked thousands of these. I know what that feeling is. This was very sticky.\"
Diaz claimed he uses only rosin, sweat and dirt on his hands.
\"I use the same thing, always,\" he said. \"I rub rosin, sweat and I put my hand in the dirt a little bit so I can have some grip on the ball. ... I was really surprised because I didn\'t have anything on my hand, glove or belt. They always check everything.\"
Carapazza confirmed there were no sticky substances on Diaz other than on his hand, but that\'s enough to get a player ejected. In recent years, Major League Baseball has cracked down on pitchers using foreign substances other than rosin because they allow for better grips and more spin on the ball.
Diaz now faces an automatic 10-game suspension for use of an illegal substance. He can appeal but said he isn\'t sure if he will.