The Baseball Celebration Epidemic
By: Ron Reagin
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
In the heat of the Athens Regional final, University of Georgia third baseman Tre Phelps delivered a massive two-run home run that flipped the script against Liberty in a must-win game.
It was definitely a huge momentum swing. But as Phelps rounded the bases, what should have been a moment of pure athletic accomplishment turned into controversy.
Phelps gestured toward the Liberty dugout on the first-base side and, after rounding first, waved again toward the first baseman and other players as he rounded the bases.
Umpire Javerro January saw it as taunting and unsportsmanlike conduct directed at an opponent. The crew promptly ejected the junior standout under NCAA Baseball Rule 2.26.f.
Head coach Wes Johnson, fiercely defending his player, was tossed as well. Georgia won the game 6-1 and advanced, but Phelps sat out Game 1 of the Super Regional.
The Call, the Debate, and the Rulebook: Social media exploded. Some called it a soft ejection, typical of over-sensitive umpires trying to kill emotion in today’s game.
Others praised the enforcement, arguing that bat flips, chest-thumping, and directed gestures cross into disrespect that has no place in baseball.
Coach Johnson later explained that Phelps was waving to family in the stands, but the umps interpreted the actions as taunting the opposition.
Most found that explanation laughable from Johnson. However, he had to do something, and trying to justify taunting is a tough spot for him. All of this could have been avoided if he had prepared his team for success.
The NCAA has drawn a clear line here. Rule 2.26 and related unsportsmanlike conduct provisions (including 5-17 in the rulebook) prohibit actions designed to intimidate, distract, or show poor sportsmanship toward opponents or umpires.
A player (non-pitcher) ejected gets an automatic one-game suspension on top of the ejection. The goal? Keep the game moving cleanly without escalating into benches-clearing brawls or turning every big play into a personal showdown.
Not an Isolated Incident: Ejections Across the Regionals: This wasn’t the only high-profile ejection during the 2026 NCAA Regionals. Tensions boiled over in multiple brackets, with six players and coaches tossed across three different regionals (Athens, Hattiesburg, and Lincoln).
In the Hattiesburg Regional elimination game, Virginia pitcher John Paone was ejected for verbal taunting against Southern Miss.
Teammate Kyle Johnson was also ejected during that same chaotic contest, tied to emotions on a home run trot (possibly involving profanity or similar unsportsmanlike language). Virginia still pulled out a wild 15-11 victory in 10 innings to eliminate the Golden Eagles.
In the Lincoln Regional, Arizona State’s Landon Hairston, the Big 12 Player of the Year, was ejected for unsportsmanlike conduct after flipping his bat dramatically following a strikeout. These incidents underscore how quickly emotions can spill over in postseason play.
Preserving the Game’s Integrity: This isn’t about killing joy. Home run trots, high-fives, and dugout celebrations are part of the excitement that makes college baseball special.
But there’s a difference between celebrating your success and directing mockery and verbal jabs at the other team.
Baseball has long prided itself on a certain decorum that separates it from sports where trash-talk and in-your-face antics have become somewhat normalized. We can hope that other sports take notice and make changes accordingly for fans, players, coaches, and officials.
Critics argue the rule is inconsistently applied or overly punitive, especially with the automatic suspension (and harsher penalties for pitchers). Supporters counter that without a significant penalty, we risk a slippery slope where every big moment becomes an immature taunting contest.
Umpires have discretion but they’re expected to maintain order, especially in highly competitive moments.
Georgia moved on without Phelps in Game 1, proving depth and resilience. But the incident, along with the others, sparked broader, tougher conversations: How much emotion is too much? Where’s the line between emotion and disrespect?
My Take as a Baseball Fan: Across the SEC and all of baseball, we love loud and competitive games. We cheer the big swings and the comebacks.
But we also respect the game’s traditions, the post-game handshake line, and the idea that you let your bat do the talking.
All these players are talented athletes who will have plenty more moments to shine and celebrate accordingly. These incidents served as a reminder that even in victory or defeat, how you carry yourself matters. We can all learn from that.
The NCAA isn’t trying to turn college baseball into a library. They’re trying to prevent it from becoming a sideshow.
By upholding the rules firmly across multiple regionals, the NCAA is sending a message that the game’s integrity comes first, no matter how big the moment, how heated the at-bat, or how passionate the player.
Here’s hoping these high-profile players and events help coaches, players, and officials make better decisions in tense moments. Baseball needs its stars playing, not sitting. Baseball and other sports as a whole benefit when the focus stays on competition, not confrontation.





