José Ramírez gets 3-game suspension knocked down to 2 for punching Tim Anderson
José Ramírez notched a win against Tim Anderson in one of MLB's wildest brawls in years, and he reportedly got a win against MLB on Saturday as well.
Initially suspended three games for the fight last weekend that derailed a game between the Chicago White Sox and Cleveland Guardians, Ramírez had his suspension knocked down to two games, according to The Athletic's Zack Maisel.
Ramírez will serve his suspension Saturday and Sunday against the Tampa Bay Rays, as he was allowed to play while the appeal was pending.
Anderson was suspended for six games, but the outcome of his appeal remains unknown. Guardians pitcher Emmanuel Clase served a one-game ban, having chosen not to appeal, while Guardians manager Terry Francona, White Sox manager Pedro Grifol and Guardians third-base coach Mike Sarbaugh were unable to appeal their one-game suspensions (coaches can't appeal MLB suspensions).
Tom Hamilton's call of the Jose Ramirez-Tim Anderson fight on Cleveland radio is the stuff of legend.
"DOWN GOES ANDERSON! DOWN GOES ANDERSON!" pic.twitter.com/ZXSUW4eE0V— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) August 6, 2023
That wave of discipline, which included fines for White Sox pitcher Michael Kopech and Guardians infielder Gabriel Arias, arose from a bizarre sequence of events that began when Ramírez doubled and slid into second base next to Anderson. Ramírez said through an interpreter after the game that he told Anderson earlier in the game that he was tagging players too hard, to which Anderson apparently took offense and squared up.
Ramírez returned the gesture, then scored a knockout blow that sent Anderson to the ground as he was pulled away by Kopech. The situation devolved from there, with Anderson talking trash and then getting carried off the field by teammate Andrew Vaughn.
The White Sox won the game 7-4, with Anderson declining to speak to the media. His only public statements on the kerfuffle since have been a series of cryptic tweets that included statements such as "y’all got me f***ed up [for real]" and "The Picture Bigger …"
Despite being the one who took the hardest blow in the fight, MLB clearly determined Anderson to be the instigator and hit him with the most discipline. That said, Ramírez's suspension might be the bigger blow to his team, as he's hitting .282/.357/.487 in another All-Star season, while Anderson is posting the worst numbers of his career at .242/.285/.288.