Astros’ Cam Smith swings three times, still walks in bizarre MLB moment
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Astros’ Cam Smith swings three times, still walks in bizarre MLB moment originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
The Houston Astros were already in control of their matchup against the Boston Red Sox on Tuesday night, but one fifth-inning plate appearance involving Cam Smith turned a routine win into one of the strangest moments of the 2026 MLB season.
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In a sport built on precision and repetition, Smith somehow struck out and walked in the same at-bat, and remarkably, no one on the field noticed in real time.
According to MLB.com, facing Boston starter Brayan Bello, Smith swung and missed at three consecutive pitches to open the plate appearance. By rule, that should have ended it. Instead, chaos unfolded. On the second pitch, a stolen base attempt led to a throwing error by catcher Connor Wong, allowing a run to score and creating confusion across the field.
That moment appears to have reset everyone’s focus except for the count.
Smith later admitted he glanced at the scoreboard and saw a 1-1 count, assuming everything was normal. Home plate umpire Mark Wegner also signaled a different count after the third swing and miss, effectively erasing what should have been strike three.
What followed felt almost impossible. Smith stayed in the box, fouled off pitches, took balls, and eventually walked on what was technically ball three. At no point did the pitcher, catcher, dugout, or umpiring crew stop play to question the count.
Even Alex Cora and the Red Sox dugout failed to challenge the situation, a rare lapse in awareness at the highest level of the sport.
After the game, Wegner acknowledged the mistake, saying he miscounted the swings and had never experienced anything like it. By rule, the count could be corrected if it was identified in time, but because no one caught it, the play stood.
The moment underscores a strange reality about baseball. Despite advances like replay review and automated strike zone experiments, the game still relies heavily on human tracking of each pitch. When that system fails collectively, as it did here, even the most basic outcome can be overturned by confusion.
Oddly enough, this is not unprecedented. Similar scoring breakdowns have been documented in MLB history, though they remain extremely rare. Still, it is almost unheard of for every participant on the field to miss it simultaneously.
For the Astros, the play had little impact on the final score in a 9-2 win. But for baseball, it served as a reminder that even in a data-driven era, the game can still produce moments that defy logic.
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