KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. -- Brian Cashman wanted to make this perfectly clear: The umpires were correct when they called Alex Rodriguez out for interference on that crazy play during the AL championship series.\n"They got it completely right, 100 percent," the New York Yankees' general manager said this week.\n"But you would hate to have a game, or a series or even a season come down to a play where they miss it and instant replay could have helped," he said. "So as far as instant replay, I'm in favor of it."\nNow, after a pennant race and postseason dotted with reversed rulings, baseball will get another chance to see who else wants to give replay a look.\nThe topic is on the agenda today at the GM meetings. And there seems to be growing support among teams to join the NFL, NBA and NHL in using instant replay on calls such as fair or foul and homer or not, but definitely not balls and strikes.\n"I think its time has come," Milwaukee assistant Gord Ash said. "The technology has improved and is there. I think there's a place for it."\nEven if replay comes up for a formal vote -- it did not go very far last year when GMs debated it -- there's no assurance it would show up during games anytime soon.\n"I don't see it," Bob Watson, vice president of on-field operations, said yesterday. "And I don't think the commissioner is in favor of it, either."\nEarlier in the day, GMs were briefed on plans to play a spring training game next March in Athens, Greece -- Baltimore probably would be involved -- and efforts to hold a World Cup-style tournament in early 2006.\nThey also talked about letting teams trade first-round draft choices and were told to be vigilant in verifying the ages of players signed in the Dominican Republic and Venezuela.\nBut with so many procedural issues to sift through this week, the prospect of adding instant replay is intriguing.\nThe Cincinnati Reds asked replay be included on the agenda. Their executives have talked about it internally for a couple of years, and they've heard from other clubs lately.\n"I think there seems to be some level of understanding that getting the play right is what underscores this thought process," Reds GM Dan O'Brien said. "I don't think any of us have any idea of a timetable."\nThat said, there's no guarantee that umpires would want it.\n"My sense is no," said former ump Richie Garcia, now an umpire supervisor. "I think we'd be fooling around with something that would take away from the game.\n"Baseball is very traditional, but I'm not going to rule it out," he said.\nGarcia worried that not every ballpark would be equipped with equal cameras to show replays from all angles. He also said he thought the concept of umpires huddling on close calls helped "take away the idea of instant replay."\nGarcia was involved in one of the most disputed calls in October memory. He was working the right-field line in the 1996 ALCS when young fan Jeffrey Maier reached over the wall and grabbed the ball before Baltimore's Tony Tarasco could make a play, and it wound up as a home run for Derek Jeter.\nThis year, the umps eventually did make the right calls in key spots at the end of the year.\nIn mid-September, Manny Ramirez circled the bases after his drive to left field was ruled fair. Moments later, the umpires correctly said the Boston star's shot hooked foul.\nIn Game 6 of the ALCS, Mark Bellhorn's drive to left field was originally ruled in play after it hit a fan in the front row at Yankee Stadium. After the umpires got together, it was rightly called a home run.\nLater in that game, Rodriguez wound up on second base after he swatted at Boston pitcher Bronson Arroyo's arm and knocked the ball loose. After all six umpires huddled, plate umpire Joe West said he had a better view than first-base ump Randy Marsh and called Rodriguez out.\nAtlanta GM John Schuerholz looks forward to this morning's debate.\n"I think it's an appropriate topic to discuss," he said. "With modern technology, it's worth talking about.\n"I'm not sure how I ultimately feel about it," he said. "But I'm open-minded, and want to hear what people have to say"
Execs discuss instant replay
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