"That's part of baseball," manager Davey Johnson said. "I couldn't actually see where the tag was, but I said (to Timmons), 'You know, he touched home plate with his hand.' I don't know if he was in position to see that right away. He said, no, he saw it." A still shot of the play, captured by The Post's Dan Steinberg on Twitter, shows that Moore was indeed safe. It's Timmons' job to get the call right, but it was certainly a bang-bang play, one which could have gone in either direction. It went in the Yankees' direction, and they ended up earning the win. "I didn't check out the replay yet," Moore said of the call. "It felt like I got a good jump on the ball. We were just unfortunate in not getting that call. "I thought I got in there, but you know. ... It's just unfortunate it didn't go our way." Thanks to that out call - and plenty of missed opportunities by both teams - we got a 14-inning contest that lasted 4 hours, 49 minutes. The Nats made two errors, blew a fairly standard double play opportunity and went 2-for-10 with runners in scoring position. The Yankees went a ridiculous 2-for-18 with runners in scoring position and left 13 on base. "It was obviously a close play," Desmond said. "I haven't looked at the replay. But Tim did a good job back there today. And he's one of the better umpires in the league. I'm sure once you look at it, he'll see what happened and go from there. "We had other opportunities to win that ball game. Obviously we would have liked that, but life goes on."