MLB

Jose Bautista, Yordano Ventura shift Jays-Royals feud to Twitter

The Royals and Blue Jays have moved on: After an exchange of hit batters on Sunday, they're now trading barbs on Twitter.

Beanballs lead to social media barbs

Toronto slugger Jose Bautista had some sharp words for Kansas City manager Ned Yost, which led to a rebuke by Royals pitcher Yordano Ventura. (Mark Blinch/Canadian Press)

The Royals and Blue Jays have moved on: After an exchange of hit batters, they're now trading barbs on Twitter.

First, Blue Jays slugger Jose Bautista posted a message Sunday night saying he had "lost a lot of respect" for Ned Yost after hearing the Royals manager praise home plate umpire Jim Wolf's handling of Sunday's game.

Two Blue Jays batters were hit by pitches and reliever Aaron Sanchez was ejected for retaliating by hitting Kansas City infielder Alcides Escobar.

That prompted Royals pitcher Yordano Ventura to post Tweets calling Bautista a "nobody" and accuse him of stealing signs. Ventura later deleted the messages, which were posted in Spanish.

Yahoo's Jeff Passan reported that the deleted tweets translated to: "We'll meet again later and if you do that with me, you'll see what I'm about. I don't care about anybody. I used to respect you, but you're a nobody. … You got lucky this time, but MLB doesn't get canceled after this season. Keep running your mouth. … You need to stop giving signs. You're gonna get it from me for being fresh and you really are a nobody."

Bautista rips Yost again

Bautista took the high road when asked to respond to Ventura's comments Monday.

"He's a young player that could use some maturing," Bautista said. "Hopefully he focuses on playing the game and allowing his ability to create a name for himself."

Bautista didn't back down from his remarks about Yost, calling the manager's praise of Wolf "ridiculous."

Wolf warned both benches after Royals pitcher Edinson Volquez hit Toronto's Josh Donaldson in the first inning of Sunday's game, a 5-2 Blue Jays win.

Donaldson complained to Wolf after Volquez and reliever Ryan Madson missed high and inside later in the game. Madson also hit Toronto's Troy Tulowitzki. Neither pitcher was ejected.

Volquez responded after the game by calling Donaldson "a little baby." Wolf ejected Sanchez after Escobar was hit on the thigh in the eighth, causing both benches and both bullpens to empty. Blue Jays manager John Gibbons, who had been ejected earlier for arguing with Wolf, returned to the field for the melee. No punches were thrown.

With files from CBCSports.ca