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Experience the awkward anticipation of Jose Valdez waiting on the mound for a new glove

During the Angels' 9-2 victory over the Reds last night, Angels reliever Jose Valdez took the mound carrying a two-toned black-and-tan glove. When he got there, though, he was told that he'd have to change it out. While he's worn that particular model before, Rule 3.07 dictates that if a pitcher's glove appears to the umpire to be distracting for the batter, that glove would need to be swapped for a more neutral option.
That meant Valdez had to wait for a new one to be procured. While he's used to throwing baseballs before thousands of fans, waiting on the mound without a glove is a whole new scenario. "What do I do with my hands?" surely flooded his mind. "Should I do somet-- ... should I like, no I'll just stand here," seemed to be his thought process. 

Manager Mike Scioscia soon found a glove and ... actually, no, this one wouldn't work either. 

The next glove was a solid fit, which meant that this didn't continue for 20 minutes, slowly devolving into absurdist theatre. 
On Tuesday, Angels reliever Jose Valdez said, through an interpreter, that he "was surprised" umpire Jeff Nelson made him take off his black-and-tan Rawlings glove. "I've been pitching with it since I was called up Aug. 6," Valdez said. "Nobody said anything in those (10) games." He used a similar, one-tone Rawlings, also with his name on it, pitched a scoreless ninth (his eighth consecutive scoreless outing), and said the glove change didn't bother his pitching at all. 

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