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Posted: Friday August 24, 2012 8:31PM ; Updated: Sunday August 26, 2012 7:11AM

Diamond suspended six games for throwing near Hamilton's head

Story Highlights

Scott Diamond was ejected Thursday for throwing near Josh Hamilton's head

Diamond is appealing the suspension, so he remains on the Twins' active roster

Joe Mauer had been hit by a pitch thrown by Roy Oswalt earlier on Thursday

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Scott Diamond
Scott Diamond reacts to being ejected for throwing near Josh Hamilton's head Thursday.
LM Otero/AP
MLB Team Page
MLB Team Page

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) -- Minnesota Twins starter Scott Diamond was suspended six games by Major League Baseball on Friday for a pitch thrown near the head of Rangers slugger Josh Hamilton.

Diamond was immediately ejected after the left-hander's pitch behind Hamilton's head in the third inning of Thursday night's game.

The suspension and undisclosed fine were announced by Joe Garagiola Jr., senior vice president of standards and on-field operations for MLB.

Since Diamond is appealing the suspension, he remained on the Twins' active roster.

"The ball got away from me, it wasn't intentional," Diamond said after the Twins' 8-0 loss Friday night. "So from this point on, all we can do is appeal it. `'

Twins catcher Joe Mauer had been hit by a pitch thrown by Roy Oswalt in the top of the third inning in the series opener Thursday night.

There were no warnings issued after Mauer got hit, but plate umpire Wally Bell quickly tossed Diamond. Manager Ron Gardenhire also got ejected after he charged out of the dugout to protest Bell's decision.

"Anytime in an umpire's judgment they go in the head area, we have to take care of business," Bell said after Thursday night's game. "I felt at the time that he had to be ejected for it."

Hamilton said before Friday's game that he felt the ball whizzing by the back of his neck. But he didn't think Diamond did that intentionally.

"I don't think he was trying to hit me in the head, I just think the ball got away from him, but it got away from him and it was close," Hamilton said. "It was close, but like I said, I don't think he did that on purpose."

Hamilton said it was the closest a pitch has ever come to hitting him in the head.

"Behind the back of my neck, I could actually feel it when it went by," Hamilton said. "Just feel the wind from the ball when it goes by."

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

 
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