"You know, the whole rule interpretation — there's rules, and then there's instructions to the umpires," Torre began. "There's separate books. And what Jerry's feeling was, that the interference didn't take precedent over the fact that the ball was already past [Wieters] when the contact took place.
"However, the rule states — and you probably have read the rule — that when contact is made — in other words, when the bat came around and hit the catcher's mask — it's a dead ball," Torre went on. "It's a dead ball. And that's the one thing that should have taken precedence."